Microbial C/N metabolic capabilities contribute to the fate of crop residue N in plant-soil-microbe continuum over multiple seasons
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-27, 00:13authored byZhihuang Xie, Yansheng Li, Zhenhua Yu, Guanghua Wang, Xiaobing Liu, Caixian TangCaixian Tang, Junjie Liu, Judong Liu, Junjiang Wu, Stephen J Herbert, Jian JinJian Jin
<p dir="ltr">The mineralization of crop residue-nitrogen (N) is important for sustainable N supply to subsequent crops. However, the microbial mechanisms regarding residue-N mineralization over growth seasons are still unclear. We amended <sup>15</sup>N-labelled maize and soybean residues to a Mollisol soil and found that, after three growth seasons, soybean plants utilized 43% and 37% of soybean and maize residue-N, respectively. Approximately 10.5% of soybean and 18.6% of maize residue-N were recovered in the labile N pools in soil. Over time, 82% of soybean residue-N was mineralized compared with 66% for maize residue-N. Greater increases in abundances of microbial functional genes involved in organic C decomposition, N mineralization, N<sub>2</sub> fixation, and denitrification were observed in the soybean residue compared to the maize residue treatment. The study implies that soybean residue amendment may lower fertilizer N input more effectively than maize residue, considering the N balance between crop demand and soil supply in farming Mollisols.</p>
Funding
The project was funded by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA28020201), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41771326), the Key Program of Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province of China (ZD2021D001), the National Key R&D Program of China (2021YFD1500400), Youth Innovation Promotion Association of Chinese Academy of Sciences (2019233), La Trobe ABC scheme project, CT and JJ were supported by Australian Research Council (DP210100775), and ZX was supported by the Postdoctoral Fellowship Program of CPSF (GZC20230446).