dc.description.abstract |
Intensifcation of staple crops through conventional agricultural practices with chemical synthetic
inputs has yielded positive outcomes in food security but with negative environmental impacts.
Ecological intensifcation using cropping systems such as maize edible-legume intercropping (MLI)
systems has the potential to enhance soil health, agrobiodiversity and signifcantly infuence crop
productivity. However, mechanisms underlying enhancement of biological soil health have not been
well studied. This study investigated the shifts in rhizospheric soil and maize-root microbiomes and
associated soil physico-chemical parameters in MLI systems of smallholder farms in comparison
to maize-monoculture cropping systems (MMC). Maize-root and rhizospheric soil samples were
collected from twenty-fve farms each conditioned by MLI and MMC systems in eastern Kenya. Soil
characteristics were assessed using Black oxidation and Walkley methods. High-throughput amplicon
sequencing was employed to analyze fungal and bacterial communities, predicting their functional
roles and diversity. The diferent MLI systems signifcantly impacted soil and maize-root microbial
communities, resulting in distinct microbe sets. Specifc fungal and bacterial genera and species
were mainly infuenced and enriched in the MLI systems (e.g., Bionectria solani, Sarocladium zeae,
Fusarium algeriense, and Acremonium persicinum for fungi, and Bradyrhizobium elkanii, Enterobacter
roggenkampii, Pantoea dispersa and Mitsuaria chitosanitabida for bacteria), which contribute to
nutrient solubilization, decomposition, carbon utilization, plant protection, bio-insecticides/fertilizer
production, and nitrogen fxation. Conversely, the MMC systems enriched phytopathogenic microbial
species like Sphingomonas leidyi and Alternaria argroxiphii. Each MLI system exhibited a unique
composition of fungal and bacterial communities that shape belowground biodiversity, notably
afecting soil attributes, plant well-being, disease control, and agroecological services. Indeed, soil
physico-chemical properties, including pH, nitrogen, organic carbon, phosphorus, and potassium were
enriched in MLI compared to MMC cropping systems. Thus, diversifcation of agroecosystems with
MLI systems enhances soil properties and shifts rhizosphere and maize-root microbiome in favor of
ecologically important microbial communities. |
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