Nitrogen-based fertilizers differentially affect protist community composition in paddy field soils
2024-01-30
(Press-News.org)
Soil microbiome has far-reaching significance, particularly for rice production, which can be better explained with a Japanese proverb: “Rice grows with soil fertility, while upland crops depend on fertilization”. Therefore, understanding the paddy field microbiome is crucial for sustainable soil fertility and rice production. This would also lead us to overcome the global food shortage problem as rice is the primary food source for nearly half of the world's population. Among the paddy field microbes, bacteria, fungi, and archaea are well-studied, while protists, the vast majority of eukaryotes, are largely unknown. Protists are the most diverse eukaryotic microorganisms including all eukaryotes except plants, animals, and fungi. They exhibit high taxonomic diversity and play important roles in soil ecosystem as predators, decomposers, primary producers, plant pathogens, and parasites. Despite their importance, they are by far the least studied microbial group. Since less is still known about soil protistology, studying them holds a vast potential for discovering and creating new knowledge.
One of the fundamental questions in soil microbiology research is “How are soil microbial communities shaped by environmental factors?” Recent efforts to understand protist communities and their response to environmental factors showed that nitrogen fertilizers have a major impact on shaping protist communities. Although nitrogen is applied to agricultural fields in different forms of fertilizer such as urea, ammonium nitrate, and diammonium hydrogen phosphate, their impact on protists is largely unknown. A new research published in Soil Ecology Letters on 19 January 2024 studied the differential effects of nitrogen fertilizer types on paddy field protist communities. Their research showed that predatory protists were the major functional and most sensitive group to nitrogen fertilizers. Bodur et al. showed that depending on the nitrogen fertilizer type, the protists form distinct communities.
First author, Bodur Ozer Seda, a PhD student at the Laboratory of Applied Protistology, Niigata University, Japan, said “Nitrogen fertilizers are widely used in agriculture, however, we did not know much about how different fertilizers affect protist communities. Our research encompassed six inorganic and one organic fertilizer across three soil types. Our results revealed diverse effects of the fertilizers on the protist community, particularly predatory protists. Moreover, the most affected protist group was Cercozoa. These findings represent a crucial first step in understanding how nitrogen fertilizers affect trophic interactions, emphasizing the need for further research to comprehensively grasp soil microbial trophic relationships”. The lead author Assistant Professor Asiloglu added “Although this was a short-term laboratory research, our results can be inspiration for further studies to reveal what kind of chances happen in paddy field microbial communities after fertilizer addition. Nitrogen fertilizers are known to affect bacterial and fungal communities as well, here we showed that the changes in predatory protist community composition can be partly responsible for the changes of their prey (bacterial and fungal) communities, which should be further studied”.
END
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2024-01-30
Ahead of the 2024 US presidential election, The BMJ today launches a forward-looking series that highlights the lessons that can be learned from the US’s covid-19 experience and the actions that are needed to prevent the loss of another million citizens in the next pandemic and improve and protect population health.
The articles, written by leading clinicians and researchers across the US, explore topics such as how systemic racism and economic inequality contributed to covid-19 disparities; mass incarceration and poor prison health as a driver of the pandemic; ...
2024-01-30
An analysis published today in the The BMJ examines the risks faced by frontline workers in the United States during the pandemic and suggests reforms that could protect population health and save lives.
Lead author Professor David Michaels at the George Washington University and his colleagues note that from the onset laws and regulations in the United States inadequately protected frontline workers. The gaps allowed a rapid spread of disease in US workplaces like meat packing plants. At the same time, these essential workers were rarely seen as a population that needed special attention ...
2024-01-30
Results of a large-scale innovative Citizen Science experiment called Project M which involved over 1000 scientists, 800 samples and 110 UK secondary schools in a huge experiment will be published in the prestigious RSC (Royal Society of Chemistry) journal CrystEngComm on 29 January 2024. The paper is titled: “Project M: Investigating the effect of additives on calcium carbonate crystallisation through a school citizen science program”. The paper shares a giant set of results from the school citizen scientists who collaborated with a team at Diamond to find out how different additives affect the different forms of calcium carbonate produced. These additives affect the ...
2024-01-29
Washington, D.C.—Researchers have identified 2 strains of probiotics that can be used to reduce weight in obese dogs. The research is published this week in Microbiology Spectrum, a journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
In the new study, the research team investigated metabolic diseases in companion animals and set out to identify probiotics suitable for long-term and safe treatment. “The initial challenge involved selecting specific metabolic diseases for examination, leading us to focus on the prevalent issue of 'obesity in pets,’” said study principal investigator Younghoon Kim, Ph.D., professor in the ...
2024-01-29
CAMBRIDGE, MA – An intricate, honeycomb-like structure of struts and beams could withstand a supersonic impact better than a solid slab of the same material. What’s more, the specific structure matters, with some being more resilient to impacts than others.
That’s what MIT engineers are finding in experiments with microscopic metamaterials — materials that are intentionally printed, assembled, or otherwise engineered with microscopic architectures that give the overall material exceptional properties.
In a study appearing today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the engineers report on a new way ...
2024-01-29
Global tree-planting campaigns have reached fad-like proportions over the past decade, and it’s easy to understand their appeal. Healthy forests help in the fight against climate change by absorbing some of our excess carbon dioxide emissions, and they can provide wildlife habitat and quality-of-life benefits for local human communities too. So why not plant more trees? It seems like an easy win.
But the problem is, there’s a huge difference between simply planting a tree and making sure that trees survive and grow over the long-term. And without the necessary ecological understanding or long-term planning and ...
2024-01-29
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 29 January 2024
Annals of Internal Medicine Tip Sheet
@Annalsofim
Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization they represent.
----------------------------
1. ...
2024-01-29
HERSHEY, Pa. — Prenatal exposure to air pollution increases the risk of severe respiratory distress in newborn babies, according to new research conducted at the Penn State College of Medicine in collaboration with the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals (MIREC) Study led by Health Canada. The risk increases with exposure specifically to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), which occur in wildfire and cigarette smoke and vehicle emissions, among other sources.
The findings, which published on Jan. 25 in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, reveal a better understanding of ...
2024-01-29
New research from University of Utah psychology researchers is helping prove what American authors John Muir and Henry David Thoreau tried to teach more than 150 years ago: Time spent in nature is good for the heart and soul.
Amy McDonnell and David Strayer are showing it is good for your brain, too. Their latest research, conducted at the university’s Red Butte Garden, uses electroencephalography (EEG), which records electrical activity in the brain with small discs attached to the scalp, to measure participants’ attentional capacity.
“A walk in nature enhances certain executive control processes in the brain above and beyond the benefits associated with exercise,” ...
2024-01-29
A new guideline to help define the emerging field of Medical Extended Reality. Which seeks to standardize terminology, categorize existing work, and provide a structured framework for future research development in MXR.
END ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Nitrogen-based fertilizers differentially affect protist community composition in paddy field soils