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Effects of different vegetation restoration patterns on the diversity of soil nitrogen-fixing microbes in Hulunbeier sandy land, Inner Mongolia of North China.

LI Gang1, WANG Li-juan1,2, LI Yu-jie1,3, QIAO Jiang1,3, ZHANG Hai-fang1, SONG Xiao-long1, YANG Dian-lin1   

  1. (1AgroEnvironmental Protection Institute, Ministry of Agriculture, Tianjin 300191, China; 2College of Life Science and Technology, Inner Mongolia Normal University, Hohhot 010022, China; 3College of Horticulture, Shenyang Agricultural University, Shenyang 110866, China)
  • Online:2013-06-18 Published:2013-06-18

Abstract: By using polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) and sequence analysis, this paper studied the nifH gene diversity and community structure of soil nitrogenfixing microbes in Hulunbeier sandy land of Inner Mongolia under four years management of five vegetation restoration modes, i.e., mixedplanting of Agropyron cristatum, Hedysarum fruticosum, Caragana korshinskii, and Elymus nutans (ACHE) and of Agropyron cristatum and Hedysarum fruticosum (AC), and monoplanting of Caragana korshinskii (UC), Agropyron cristatum (UA), and Hedysarum fruticosum (UH), taking the bare land as the control (CK). There existed significant differences in the community composition of nitrogenfixing microbes among the five vegetation
restoration patterns. The Shannon index of the nifH gene was the highest under ACHE, followed by under AC, UC, UA, and UH, and the lowest in CK. Except that UH and CK had less difference in the Shannon index, the other four vegetation restoration modes had a significantly higher Shannon index than CK (P<0.05). The phylogenetic analysis showed that the soil nitrogen-fixing microbes under UA, UH, and UC were mainly of cyanobacteria, but the soil nitrogen-fixing microbes under AC and ACHE changed obviously, mainly of proteobacteria, and also of cyanobacteria. The canonical correlation analysis showed that the soil total phosphorus, available phosphorus, total nitrogen, and nitrate nitrogen contents under the five vegetation restoration modes had significant effects on the nitrogen-fixing microbial communities, and there existed significant correlations among the soil total phosphorus, available phosphorus, total nitrogen, and nitrate nitrogen. It was suggested that the variations of the community composition of soil nitrogen-fixing microbes under the five vegetation restoration modes were resulted from the interactive and combined effects of the soil physical and chemical factors.