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SOIL BIODIVERSITY AS THE CENTRAL ROLE OF PLANT-SOIL FEEDBACKS IN AMAZON AGROFORESTRY SYSTEMS

Grant number: 22/05561-0
Support Opportunities:Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate
Start date: March 01, 2024
End date: November 30, 2026
Field of knowledge:Agronomical Sciences - Agronomy - Soil Science
Principal Investigator:Tsai Siu Mui
Grantee:Guilherme Lucio Martins
Host Institution: Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura (CENA). Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Piracicaba , SP, Brazil
Associated scholarship(s):24/06334-2 - Linking microbes and metabolites between litter and soil interface: organic carbon and soil health in a chronosequence of Amazonian agroforestry, BE.EP.DR

Abstract

Interactions between plants, microorganisms, and soil occur continuously and can have positive or negative effects, known as plant-soil-feedback (PSF), but are still poorly understood in Amazonian soils. Agroforestry systems (AFS) are crucial for food security; however, they are dependent on natural processes and ecosystem services to maintain their sustainability and productivity. Furthermore, deforestation and land-use change can intensify extreme seasonal events, such as heatwaves and heavy rain, leading to immeasurable losses for biodiversity. The objective of this project is to evaluate and apply the PSF model in Amazonian SAFs through two complementary studies. The first study will characterize the taxonomic and functional composition of the soil, as well as the composition of decomposer fungi in the litter layer, in AFS areas, primary forest, and degraded pasture during the dry and rainy seasons. Nutrient content, dissolved organic matter, and fungal community of the litter layer will also be evaluated. The soils will be characterized in depth for fertility, organic matter fractionation, total carbon, and enzyme activity involved in C, P, and S cycling. The second study will apply the PSF model in a greenhouse experiment to evaluate the effect of plant and healthy soil inoculum on the recovery of degraded soils. The assay is divided into two stages: first, soils were seeded with three native species in SAF, forest, and pasture soils, becoming inoculants for the second stage. These soils were inoculated into degraded pasture soils, and new plants were grown in co-specific and hetero-specific soils. During the second trial, plant growth rate, biomass production, and nutrient absorption will be measured, as well as quantification of 16S rRNA and ITS soil genes. The results will allow us to identify the interactions of the inoculants with different native species, identifying key processes to understand the soil-plant interactions for the recovery of degraded areas. This project is linked to the joint call FAPESP-FAPEAM "Plant-soil feedbacks in the Amazon Forest and in agricultural systems in the state of Amazonas" (Process: 20/08927-0).

News published in Agência FAPESP Newsletter about the scholarship:
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Articles published in other media outlets ( ):
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VEICULO: TITULO (DATA)
VEICULO: TITULO (DATA)

Scientific publications
(The scientific publications listed on this page originate from the Web of Science or SciELO databases. Their authors have cited FAPESP grant or fellowship project numbers awarded to Principal Investigators or Fellowship Recipients, whether or not they are among the authors. This information is collected automatically and retrieved directly from those bibliometric databases.)
DE FREITAS, ANDERSON SANTOS; ZAGATTO, LUIS FELIPE GUANDALIN; ROCHA, GABRIEL SILVESTRE; MUCHALAK, FRANCIELE; MARTINS, GUILHERME LUCIO; SILVA-ZAGATTO, SOLANGE DOS SANTOS; HANADA, ROGERIO EIJI; MUNIZ, ALEKSANDER WESTPHAL; TSAI, SIU MUI. Harnessing the synergy of Urochloa brizantha and Amazonian Dark Earth microbiomes for enhanced pasture recovery. BMC Microbiology, v. 25, n. 1, p. 11-pg., . (20/08927-0, 22/05561-0)
BIELUCZYK, WANDERLEI; DUARTE, MARINA PIRES; MARTINS, GUILHERME LUCIO; CAMARGO, PLINIO BARBOSA DE; NORONHA, NORBERTO CORNEJO; PICCOLO, MARISA DE CASSIA; TSAI, SIU MUI. Slash-and-burn agriculture disrupts the carbon storage potential and ecosystem multifunctionality of Amazon's secondary forests. AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, v. 381, p. 15-pg., . (21/00976-4, 23/18333-8, 22/05561-0, 23/02576-9)