Ecological composite fertilizer application enhances wheat yield and optimizes rhizosphere microbial community under reduced fertilization
Yu Wang, Xinhao Luo, Meiling Ping, Haining Wang, Yueming Bao, Chuansheng Zhao, Xiaoyu Li, Jin Chen

TL;DR
Using ecological composite fertilizer with reduced traditional fertilizer boosts wheat yield and improves soil microbes, supporting sustainable farming.
Contribution
A novel strategy combining reduced fertilizer with ecological composite fertilizer to enhance wheat yield and microbial diversity.
Findings
The TF85+ECF treatment increased wheat yield by 30.63% compared to reduced fertilizer alone.
ECF application enhanced carbon and nitrogen cycling enzymes and key functional genes in soil.
ECF improved microbial network complexity and identified beneficial keystone taxa linked to soil health.
Abstract
Excessive fertilization poses a major threat to sustainable agriculture, resulting in resource waste and environmental degradation. The ecological composite fertilizer (ECF) combined with fertilizer reduction represents a promising strategy to improve rhizosphere microbial diversity in wheat systems. A field experiment, containing six treatments, namely traditional compound fertilizer (TF, applied at the conventional rate) with a 10% reduction (TF90), TF90 plus ECF application (TF90+ECF), TF with a 15% reduction (TF85), TF85 plus ECF application (TF85+ECF), TF with a 20% reduction (TF80), and TF80 plus ECF application (TF80+ECF), was conducted to explore the influences of fertilizer reduction combined with ECF application on wheat yield and rhizosphere soil microbial diversity. Results showed that the TF85+ECF treatment achieved the highest wheat yield at 8,717.33 kg ha−1, which was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSoil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics · Plant-Microbe Interactions and Immunity · Mycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions
