Lupwayi, N. Z., B. H. Ellert, E. Bremer, E. G. Smith, R. M. Petri, J. A. D. Neilson and H.H. Janzen . 2023.
Variable results have been reported on the effects of crop residue loads on soil microbial properties. We investigated changes in soil bacterial composition, β-glucosidase enzyme activity and nutrient bioavailability in response to wheat residue loading. The treatments included three levels of above-ground wheat residues (removed, retained or supplemented), with or without fertilizer N. Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes and Verrucomicrobia (the first two are copiotrophs) were less abundant where residues were removed than where residues were retained or supplemented, but the reverse was true for Actinobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Chloroflexi and Nitrospirae (all oligotrophs, although some Actinobacteria can be copiotrophic). Actinobacteria were also less abundant where fertilizer N was applied, and the abundances of their genera (including Arthrobacter and Mycobacterium) increased where residues were removed, confirming that they were oligotrophic in this study. β-diversity showed similar differences in the bacterial community structures because of residue management, but %u03B1-diversity was not affected by residue management or N fertilizer. β-glucosidase enzyme activities increased as C inputs increased with residue manipulation and N fertilizer. The enzyme activities increased with increasing residue loading in the 0-15 cm soil depth, but decreased with soil depth. Soil K supply increased with increasing residue loading, but nitrate-N supply was highest with residue retention. These results demonstrate remarkable resilience of soil microbial functioning under a wide range of crop residue inputs, without adverse effects on enzyme activity attributable to inorganic N fertilizer. The increasing β-glucosidase activity with increasing residue loading probably explains why crop residue return does not always increase soil C stocks