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Article Abstract

The imbalanced soil nutrient status caused by the long-term monoculture of flue-cured tobacco are a concern. The tobacco-maize relay intercropping, widely used in Yunnan, may improve soil nutrients by enhancing the soil microbial community, but this remains unexplored. This study employed high-throughput sequencing technology to examine soil microbial diversity under tobacco monoculture and tobacco-maize relay intercropping, using the varieties Hongda and K326, respectively. The results indicated that tobacco-maize relay intercropping significantly enhanced root biomass compared to tobacco monoculture, with no significant effect on aboveground biomass. This intercropping treatment also significantly improved soil physicochemical properties, including soil pH, total phosphorus, available phosphorus, and available potassium, which was associated with an increase in the soil microbial community (as indicated by the Chao1 and Shannon indices). Specifically, the abundance of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, Nitrospira, and Acidobacteria increased, but the abundance of Chloroflexi decreased. Therefore, these findings suggest that tobacco-maize relay intercropping can improve soil physicochemical properties and enhance soil nutrient supply.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11757017PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2024.1389156DOI Listing

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The imbalanced soil nutrient status caused by the long-term monoculture of flue-cured tobacco are a concern. The tobacco-maize relay intercropping, widely used in Yunnan, may improve soil nutrients by enhancing the soil microbial community, but this remains unexplored. This study employed high-throughput sequencing technology to examine soil microbial diversity under tobacco monoculture and tobacco-maize relay intercropping, using the varieties Hongda and K326, respectively.

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Crop diversity for yield increase.

PLoS One

November 2009

Key Laboratory of Agro-Biodiversity and Pest Management of Education Ministry of China, Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming, Yunnan, China.

Traditional farming practices suggest that cultivation of a mixture of crop species in the same field through temporal and spatial management may be advantageous in boosting yields and preventing disease, but evidence from large-scale field testing is limited. Increasing crop diversity through intercropping addresses the problem of increasing land utilization and crop productivity. In collaboration with farmers and extension personnel, we tested intercropping of tobacco, maize, sugarcane, potato, wheat and broad bean--either by relay cropping or by mixing crop species based on differences in their heights, and practiced these patterns on 15,302 hectares in ten counties in Yunnan Province, China.

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