Effect of dung and dung beetle application on topsoil fungal assemblage of a post-coal mining reclamation land: Towards soil health improvement

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Date
2023Author
Ezeokoli, Obinna T
Badenhorst, Jessica
Raimi, Adekunle
Dabrowski, Jackie
Scholtz, Clarke H
Adeleke, Rasheed A
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Soil management practices such as organic matter input can ameliorate soil health, including microbial com munities that are crucial for ecological processes. In this study, the effect of successive application of cattle dung
and/or dung beetle on the diversity and ecological guild of topsoil fungal assemblages on a post-coal mining
reclaimed site was investigated. Three experimental treatments namely: dung plus dung beetles (dung + beetle),
dung only (dung-only), and no dung, no dung beetle (control) was established on 4-m2 subplots on a ≥16-year old post-coal mining reclamation area. Following a 17-month experimental period, topsoil fungal assemblage
was determined using next-generation sequencing of fungal ribosomal internally transcribed spacer 2 region. The
highest operational taxonomic unit (OTU) richness and Shannon-Wiener diversity were obtained in the dung only treatment while the lowest OTU richness and diversity was obtained in control treatment. Although not
statistically significant, a trend towards lower OTU richness in the topsoil was observed with the addition of dung
beetle compared to the only dung treatment. In multivariate space, fungal communities were differentiated
between dung-only and control, suggesting the influence of dung addition. Overall, dung addition primarily
improved topsoil fungal diversity and the abundance of beneficial plant-fungal symbionts important for nutrient
mobilisation in the soil, with a trend towards lower diversity observed with dung beetle addition suggesting
possible vertical displacement of organic matter and ecologically relevant fungal species to deeper soil depths
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- NWU Official [165]