Microbes and Environments
Online ISSN : 1347-4405
Print ISSN : 1342-6311
ISSN-L : 1342-6311
Regular Paper
Invention of Artificial Rice Field Soil: A Tool to Study the Effect of Soil Components on the Activity and Community of Microorganisms Involved in Anaerobic Organic Matter Decomposition
Yu MaedaKazumori MiseWataru IwasakiAkira WatanabeSusumu AsakawaRasit AsilogluJun Murase
Author information
JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS FULL-TEXT HTML
Supplementary material

2020 Volume 35 Issue 4 Article ID: ME20093

Details
Abstract

Soils are characterized by diverse biotic and abiotic constituents, and this complexity hinders studies on the effects of individual soil components on microorganisms in soil. Although artificial soils have been used to overcome this issue, anoxic soils have not yet been examined. We herein aimed to create artificial soil that reproduces anaerobic methane production by soil from a rice field. Organic materials and mineral particles separated from rice field soil were mixed to prepare an artificial soil matrix; the matrix was added with a small volume of a soil suspension as a microbial inoculum. When the microbial inoculum was added immediately after matrix preparation, anaerobic decomposition was markedly less than that by original soil. When the inoculum was added 9–15 days after soil matrix preparation, anaerobic CO2 and methane production was markedly activated, similar to that by original soil after 40 days of incubation, which suggested that the maturation of the soil matrix was crucial for the reproduction of anaerobic microbial activities. The diversity of the microbial community that developed in artificial soil was markedly less than that in original soil, whereas their predicted functional profiles were similar. Humic substances altered the composition and network patterns of the microbial community. These results suggested that the functional redundancy of soil microorganisms was sustained by different microbial sub-communities. The present study demonstrated that artificial soil is a useful tool for investigating the effects of soil components on microorganisms in anoxic soil.

Content from these authors
© 2020 by Japanese Society of Microbial Ecology / Japanese Society of Soil Microbiology / Taiwan Society of Microbial Ecology / Japanese Society of Plant Microbe Interactions / Japanese Society for Extremophiles.
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top