Straw return affects the soil carbon and nitrogen pools and microbial
structural and functional diversity
Abstract
Straw return into the field reduces the reliance on chemical
fertilisers, promoting sustainable straw utilisation, and mitigating
soil nodulation associated with excessive chemical fertiliser
application. In this study, we investigated the effects of straw return
on soil carbon and nitrogen fractions and the structural and functional
diversity of soil microbial communities. We set up four treatments: S0
(0% straw returned to the field), S1/2 (50% straw returned), S1 (100%
straw returned to the field), and S2 (200% straw returned to the
field). The results revealed that most carbon and nitrogen fractions
increased with increased amounts of straw returned into the field (soil
organic carbon and total nitrogen: 6.4–39.8 % and 2.9–15.1 %,
dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen: 1.4–37.9 % and 20.2–33.1 %,
microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen: 26.3–129.3 % and 4.7–62.6 %,
and light organic carbon and nitrogen: 52.4–155.9 % and 72.6–166.7
%). High-throughput sequencing and Biolog-ECO revealed that straw
return significantly altered the relative abundance of bacterial and
fungal communities and enhanced soil carbon metabolism. Redundancy and
correlation analyses and partial least squares path modelling revealed
that Proteobacteria (P = 0.002), Acidobacteriota (P = 0.004),
Mortierellomycota (P < 0.05), and amino acid carbon sources (P
< 0.01) were correlated with the changes in soil carbon and
nitrogen fractions. Returning straw to the field significantly boosted
the soil carbon and nitrogen fractions and affected soil carbon pools,
particularly the active ones, by markedly influencing soil bacterial
activity and consequently altering the soil carbon pool content. Our
results provide a scientific and theoretical basis for enhancing
nutrient content in dryland wheat calcareous brown soil, establishing a
healthy soil ecological environment, and improving quality and
efficiency in wheat production.