Abrupt versus gradual application of pesticides: effects on soil bacterial and fungal communities
Abstract
Pesticides are a major anthropogenic input to the environment and a factor in global change that puts pressure on soil microbial communities. However, the effects of different rates of pesticide application on soils remain poorly understood. This study investigates how abrupt versus gradual pesticide applications influence soil bacterial and fungal communities. Employing high-throughput sequencing, we examined the microbial diversity and community composition in response to ten commonly used pesticides. Bacterial communities exhibited minimal changes across treatments, whereas fungal communities responded strongly to pesticide exposure. Gradual applications reduced the relative abundance of dominant fungal taxa, resulting in an overall increase in community evenness. This effect was particularly pronounced for two herbicides and a triazole fungicide, which induced substantial shifts in fungal composition. Conversely, abrupt pesticide applications resulted in transient disruptions but did not promote the long-term proliferation of rare fungal variants. These findings suggest that prolonged exposure to pesticides exerts strong selective pressures on fungi, potentially altering fundamental soil functions such as nutrient cycling and decomposition. Future research should focus on the long-term responses of soil microbial communities to pesticide application and the cumulative effects of chronic low-dose exposure to provide a more comprehensive understanding of how they shape microbial communities.
Graphical Abstract
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Fungal communities were more responsive to pesticides than bacterial communities
Herbicides caused strong non-target effects, similar to those of fungicides
Gradual pesticide applications altered fungal diversity and community composition
Rare fungal taxa proliferated under gradual exposure, increasing evenness
Prolonged exposure exerted greater selective pressure than abrupt application
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