Crop-associated differences in soil chemical properties and root-associated bacterial communities between Welsh onion and sweet potato

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Crop-associated differences in soil chemical properties and root-associated bacterial communities between Welsh onion and sweet potato

Authors

Tanaka, A.; Nakajima, T.; Kubota, S.; Takemoto, D.

Abstract

Crop species may shape soil chemical properties and root-associated microbiota, but direct comparisons between contrasting crops remain limited. We compared soils and root-associated bacterial communities of Welsh onion (Allium fistulosum) and sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) under the same field context. Sweet potato soil showed significantly lower electrical conductivity, inorganic nitrogen, and Mg saturation than control soil. Root-associated communities differed between crops, whereas alpha diversity did not. Proteobacteria-related taxa were more represented in Welsh onion roots, whereas Actinomycetia-related taxa were more represented in sweet potato roots, providing a basis for future studies on crop-specific soil microbial management.

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