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Supplementary data for "Organic amendments to potato soils inconsistently enrich yield-associated soil microbiota across growing regions of the continental US", Klasek et al

Version 3 2025-10-08, 20:42
Version 2 2025-10-08, 20:41
Version 1 2025-10-08, 20:26
Posted on 2025-10-08 - 20:42 authored by Scott Klasek
<p>Study context:</p> <p>Soil microbes play diverse and interconnected roles in mediating plant health, growth, and disease, but understanding the specifics of how they work and applying them across different agricultural systems remains a challenge. To address this, we amassed a dataset from eight potato field sites across major US growing regions consisting of nearly two thousand soil bacterial and fungal microbiomes paired with soil chemical and tuber yield data. We describe how soil microbiomes are impacted by different soil treatments (compost amendments, chemical fumigation, and mustard incorporation), and identify treatments that boosted yields by up to 23% by increasing proportions of certain bacterial or fungal sequences. Compost amendments affected yield-associated taxa more often than other soil treatments, but these effects varied by rotation length and growing region. Changes to soil chemistry resulting from specific soil treatments did not influence abundances of yield-associated taxa, suggesting that the ways in which they may act to maintain plant vigor are field-specific and complex, calling for further study.</p>

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FUNDING

USDA-NIFA-SCRI (grant 2018-51181- 28704)

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    AUTHORS (6)

    • James E. Crants
    • Kenneth Frost
    • Brenda K. Schroeder
    • Carl Rosen
    • Linda Kinkel
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