Soil prokaryotic and fungal biome structures associated with crop disease status across the Japan Archipelago

  • Fujita H
  • Yoshida S
  • Suzuki K
  • et al.
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Abstract

Understanding how microbiome structure and functions are organized in soil ecosystems is one of the major challenges in both basic ecology and applied microbiology. Given the ongoing worldwide degradation of agroecosystems, building frameworks for exploring structural diversity and functional profiles of soil microbiomes is an essential task. Our study provides an overview of cropland microbiome states in light of potential crop-disease-suppressive functions. The large data set allowed us to explore highly functional species sets that may be stably managed in agroecosystems. Furthermore, an analysis of network architecture highlighted species that are potentially used to cause shifts from disease-prevalent states of agroecosystems to disease-suppressive states. By extending the approach of comparative analyses toward broader geographic ranges and diverse agricultural practices, agroecosystem with maximized biological functions will be further explored.

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Fujita, H., Yoshida, S., Suzuki, K., & Toju, H. (2024). Soil prokaryotic and fungal biome structures associated with crop disease status across the Japan Archipelago. MSphere, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00803-23

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