Effects of planting quinoa on soil properties and microbial community in
saline soil
Abstract
Quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa), a herbaceous annual, has been widely
cultivated in recent years because of its high nutritional value and
strong tolerance to abiotic stresses. The study was conducted at two
planting densities (LD, 10 plants/m2; HD, 65 plants/m2) on ameliorated
coastal mudflats in Jiangsu Province, China (118° 46′ E, 32° 03′ N). The
results showed soil salinity and organic matter were higher in the HD
than LD treatment, and salinity of the rhizosphere soil was higher than
that of the non-rhizosphere soil. Quinoa grown in HD was taller, with
thicker stalks and lower yields per plant, but higher yield per unit
area. Amplicon sequencing showed that Proteobacteria, Bacteroidota and
Acidobacteria were the dominant bacterial phyla. Regarding the
rhizosphere soil, the Shannon index was higher in the HD than LD, and
Proteobacteria and Bacteroidota were more abundant in the HD treatment.
Fifty-one differential metabolites were identified by metabolomic
assays, belonging to 14 annotated metabolic pathways.
S-adenosylmethionine was the most abundant and up-regulated metabolite
(fold change >1.67), and was more abundant in the roots
from the LD than HD treatment. Docosahexaenoic acid was more abundant in
the HD than LD treatment, and was down-regulated metabolite. In
conclusion, planting density was an important factor affecting quinoa
yield; compared with unplanted soil, planting quinoa at low density
increased the content of the important metabolite S-adenosylmethionine
in the root system of quinoa, and high density cultivation of quinoa
increased soil salinity and microbial abundance and diversity.