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Effects of consecutive monoculture of sweet potato on soil bacterial community as determined by pyrosequencing.

Soil bacteria play key roles in determining soil health and plant growth. In this study, four sweet potato fields that had been consecutively monocultured for 1, 2, 3, and 4 years were used to investigate the effect of monoculture on soil physicochemical properties and soil bacterial communities. The results revealed that continuous cropping led to a significant decline in soil pH, soil organic carbon, and soil bacterial abundance. Miseq pyrosequencing analysis of 16S rRNA genes revealed that Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes were the main phyla in the sweet potato monoculture soils, comprising up to 66.24% of the total sequences. The relative abundances of beneficial bacteria, including Actinobacteria, Gemmatimonadetes, Firmicutes, Xanthomonadaceae, Rhodospirillaceae, and Syntrophobacteraceae, as well as their subgroups at the genus and operational taxonomic unit (OTU) levels, decreased considerably as the number of continuous cropping years increased. In contrast, the number of potentially pathogenic bacteria, such as Acidobacteria, Sphingomonadaceae, and Pedobacter accumulated with increasing years. The results also showed the alterations to the bacterial community in the sweet potato monoculture soils were mainly driven by soil pH and soil organic matter. Overall, the decline in soil quality after successive sweet potato monoculture can be attributed to the imbalance in soil properties and soil microbes, including the decrease in soil pH and soil organic carbon, and the enrichment of pathogenic bacteria at the expense of plant-beneficial bacteria.

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