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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2023, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (2): 481-490.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.202302.011

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Effects of partial substitution of chemical fertilizer with organic fertilizer on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal community of Mangifera indica

JIANG Shangtao1, LI Han1, PENG Haiying1, MEI Xinlan1, CHEN Tingsu2, XU Yangchun1, DONG Caixia1*, SHEN Qirong1   

  1. 1Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory for Organic Solid Waste Utilization/Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Solid Organic Waste Resource Utilization/Engineering Center of Resource-Saving Fertilizers, Ministry of Education/College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China;
    2Institute of Microbiology Research, Guangxi Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Nanning 530007, China
  • Received:2022-03-04 Accepted:2022-11-15 Online:2023-02-15 Published:2023-08-15

Abstract: Nutrient enrichment caused by fertilization would reduce the diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). To explore whether partial substitution of chemical fertilizer with organic fertilizer would alleviate the negative effects of nutrient enrichment on AMF, we conducted a two-year mango (Mangifera indica) field experiment to examine the effects of different fertilization regimes on AMF communities in roots and rhizospheric soils by using high-throughput sequencing. The treatments included chemical-only fertilization (control), and two kinds of organic fertilizer (commercial organic fertilizer and bio-organic fertilizer) with replacing 12% (low) and 38% (high) chemical fertilizer. The results showed that under equivalent nutrient input, partial substitution of chemical fertilizer with organic fertilizer had positive effects on the yield and quality of mango. The application of organic fertilizer could effectively increase AMF richness. AMF diversity was significantly positively correlated with some indices of fruit quality. Compared with chemical-only fertilization, high replacement ratio of organic fertilizer could significantly change root AMF community, but did not affect AMF community in the rhizospheric soil. Bio-organic fertilizer could enrich more AMF species and form a more complex AMF co-occurrence network than commercial organic fertilizer. In all, replacing chemical fertilizer with a high proportion of organic fertilizer could improve the yield and quality of mango while maintain AMF richness. The changes of AMF community caused by organic fertilizer substitution pre-ferably occurred in roots rather than soils.

Key words: arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, organic fertilizer, chemical fertilizer, mango, high-throughput sequencing