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Analysis of soil eDNA functional genes: potential to increase profitability and sustainability of pastoral agriculture

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Auteur
Wakelin S.A., Cave V.M., Dignam B.E., D’Ath C., Tourna M., Condron L.M., Zhou J., Van Nostrand J.D., O’Callaghan M.
Date
2016
Language
en
DOI
10.1080/00288233.2016.1209529
Sujet
agricultural soil
alternative agriculture
DNA
ecosystem function
functional role
genetic analysis
genomics
greenhouse gas
land use
metadata
multivariate analysis
network analysis
profitability
soil ecosystem
soil management
New Zealand
Taylor and Francis Ltd.
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Résumé
Management of soil biological resources to optimise plant production, efficiency of nutrient inputs, and system sustainability is an emerging opportunity for pastoral agriculture. To achieve these goals, suitable tools that can assess the functional state of the soil ecosystem must be developed and standardised approaches to their application adopted. Towards this end, we have undertaken comprehensive, high-density functional-gene microarray analysis (GeoChip5) of environmental DNA (eDNA) extracted from 50 pastoral soils. When combined with soil, environmental and management metadata, the information can be used to provide insights into soil biological processes spanning greenhouse gas emissions, through to natural suppression of plant root diseases. To provide an example of a structured workflow of analysis in a pastoral system context, we analysed the GeoChip data using a combination of approaches spanning routine univariate methods through to more complex multivariate and network-based analysis. Analyses were restricted to comparing effects of land-use (dairy or ‘other’ farming systems), and exploring relationships of the GeoChip data with the soil properties from each sample. These exemplar analyses present a pathway for the application of eDNA approaches (GeoChip or others) to deliver outcomes for pastoral agricultural in New Zealand. © 2016 The Royal Society of New Zealand.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/80770
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