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Since Jacques Monod's foundational work in the 1940s, investigators studying bacterial physiology have largely (but not exclusively) focused on the exponential phase of bacterial cultures, which is characterized by rapid growth and high biosynthesis activity in the presence of excess nutrients. However, this is not the predominant state of bacterial life. In nature, most bacteria experience nutrient limitation most of the time. In fact, investigators even prior to Monod had identified other aspects of bacterial growth, including what is now known as the stationary phase, when nutrients become limiting. This review will discuss how bacteria transition to growth arrest in response to nutrient limitation through changes in transcription, translation, and metabolism. We will then examine how these changes facilitate survival during potentially extended periods of nutrient limitation, with particular attention to the metabolic strategies that underpin bacterial longevity in this state.
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Bacterias , Longevidad , Bacterias/genética , Fenómenos Fisiológicos Bacterianos , División Celular , Regulación Bacteriana de la Expresión GénicaRESUMEN
Limited nutrient availability in the tumor microenvironment can cause the rewiring of signaling and metabolic networks to confer cancer cells with survival advantages. We show here that the limitation of glucose, glutamine and serum from the culture medium resulted in the survival of a population of cancer cells with high viability and capacity to form tumors in vivo. These cells also displayed a remarkable increase in the abundance and size of lysosomes. Moreover, lysosomes were located mainly in the perinuclear region in nutrient-limited cells; this translocation was mediated by a rapid post-transcriptional increase in the key endolysosomal trafficking protein Rab7a. The acidic lysosomes in nutrient-limited cells could trap weakly basic drugs such as doxorubicin, mediating resistance of the cells to the drug, which could be partially reversed with the lysosomal inhibitor bafilomycin A1. An in vivo chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay indicated a remarkable decrease in microtumor volume when nutrient-limited cells were treated with 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) and bafilomycin A1 compared to cells treated with either agent alone. Overall, our data indicate the activation of complementary pathways with nutrient limitation that can enable cancer cells to survive, proliferate and acquire drug resistance.
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Resistencia a Antineoplásicos , Lisosomas , Macrólidos , Proteínas de Unión a GTP rab7 , Humanos , Línea Celular Tumoral , Doxorrubicina/farmacología , Resistencia a Antineoplásicos/genética , Fluorouracilo/farmacología , Lisosomas/metabolismo , Macrólidos/farmacología , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/patología , Neoplasias/tratamiento farmacológico , Nutrientes/metabolismo , Proteínas de Unión a GTP rab7/metabolismoRESUMEN
Locusts are grasshoppers that can migrate en masse and devastate food security. Plant nutrient content is a key variable influencing population dynamics, but the relationship is not straightforward. For an herbivore, plant quality depends not only on the balance of nutrients and antinutrients in plant tissues, which is influenced by land use and climate change, but also on the nutritional state and demands of the herbivore, as well as its capacity to extract nutrients from host plants. In contrast to the concept of a positive relationship between nitrogen or protein concentration and herbivore performance, a five-decade review of lab and field studies indicates that equating plant N to plant quality is misleading because grasshoppers respond negatively or neutrally to increasing plant N just as often as they respond positively. For locusts specifically, low-N environments are actually beneficial because they supply high energy rates that support migration. Therefore, intensive land use, such as continuous grazing or cropping, and elevated ambient CO2 levels that decrease the protein:carbohydrate ratios of plants are predicted to broadly promote locust outbreaks.
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Saltamontes , Animales , Ecosistema , Plantas , Herbivoria , NutrientesRESUMEN
Plant species occupy distinct niches along a nitrogen-to-phosphorus (N:P) gradient, yet there is no general framework for belowground nutrient acquisition traits in relation to N or P limitation. We retrieved several belowground traits from databases, placed them in the "root economics space" framework, and linked these to a dataset of 991 plots in Eurasian herbaceous plant communities, containing plant species composition, aboveground community biomass and tissue N and P concentrations. Our results support that under increasing N:P ratio, belowground nutrient acquisition strategies shift from "fast" to "slow" and from "do-it-yourself" to "outsourcing", with alternative "do-it-yourself" to "outsourcing" strategies at both ends of the spectrum. Species' mycorrhizal capacity patterns conflicted with root economics space predictions based on root diameter, suggesting evolutionary development of alternative strategies under P limitation. Further insight into belowground strategies along nutrient stoichiometry is crucial for understanding the high abundance of threatened plant species under P limitation.
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Micorrizas , Plantas , Biomasa , Nitrógeno , Nutrientes , Suelo , Raíces de PlantasRESUMEN
Global change is rapidly and fundamentally altering many of the processes regulating the flux of energy throughout ecosystems, and although researchers now understand the effect of temperature on key rates (such as aquatic primary productivity), the theoretical foundation needed to generate forecasts of biomass dynamics and extinction risk remains underdeveloped. We develop new theory that describes the interconnected effects of nutrients and temperature on phytoplankton populations and show that the thermal response of equilibrium biomass (i.e. carrying capacity) always peaks at a lower temperature than for productivity (i.e. growth rate). This mismatch is driven by differences in the thermal responses of growth, death, and per-capita impact on the nutrient pool, making our results highly general and applicable to widely used population models beyond phytoplankton. We further show that non-equilibrium dynamics depend on the pace of environmental change relative to underlying vital rates and that populations respond to variable environments differently at high versus low temperatures due to thermal asymmetries.
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Ecosistema , Fitoplancton , Temperatura , Biomasa , Dinámica Poblacional , NutrientesRESUMEN
Marine algae are central to global carbon fixation, and their productivity is dictated largely by resource availability. Reduced nutrient availability is predicted for vast oceanic regions as an outcome of climate change; however, there is much to learn regarding response mechanisms of the tiny picoplankton that thrive in these environments, especially eukaryotic phytoplankton. Here, we investigate responses of the picoeukaryote Micromonas commoda, a green alga found throughout subtropical and tropical oceans. Under shifting phosphate availability scenarios, transcriptomic analyses revealed altered expression of transfer RNA modification enzymes and biased codon usage of transcripts more abundant during phosphate-limiting versus phosphate-replete conditions, consistent with the role of transfer RNA modifications in regulating codon recognition. To associate the observed shift in the expression of the transfer RNA modification enzyme complement with the transfer RNAs encoded by M. commoda, we also determined the transfer RNA repertoire of this alga revealing potential targets of the modification enzymes. Codon usage bias was particularly pronounced in transcripts encoding proteins with direct roles in managing phosphate limitation and photosystem-associated proteins that have ill-characterized putative functions in "light stress." The observed codon usage bias corresponds to a proposed stress response mechanism in which the interplay between stress-induced changes in transfer RNA modifications and skewed codon usage in certain essential response genes drives preferential translation of the encoded proteins. Collectively, we expose a potential underlying mechanism for achieving growth under enhanced nutrient limitation that extends beyond the catalog of up- or downregulated protein-encoding genes to the cell biological controls that underpin acclimation to changing environmental conditions.
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Chlorophyta , Uso de Codones , Fosfatos/metabolismo , ARN de Transferencia/genética , ARN de Transferencia/metabolismo , Codón/genética , Codón/metabolismo , Chlorophyta/genética , Chlorophyta/metabolismo , Biosíntesis de ProteínasRESUMEN
Resource storage is a critical component of plant life history. While the storage of nonstructural carbohydrates in wood has been studied extensively, the multiple functions of mineral nutrient storage have received much less attention. Here, we highlight the size of wood nutrient pools, a primary determinant of whole-plant nutrient use efficiency, and a substantial fraction of ecosystem nutrient budgets, particularly tropical forests. Wood nutrient concentrations also show exceptional interspecific variation, even among co-occurring plant species, yet how they align with other plant functional traits and fit into existing trait economic spectra is unclear. We review the chemical forms and location of nutrient pools in bark and sapwood, and the evidence that nutrient remobilization from sapwood is associated with mast reproduction, seasonal leaf flush, and the capacity to resprout following damage. We also emphasize the role wood nutrients are likely to play in determining decomposition rates. Given the magnitude of wood nutrient stocks, and the importance of tissue stoichiometry to forest productivity, a key unresolved question is whether investment in wood nutrients is a relatively fixed trait, or conversely whether under global change plants will adjust nutrient allocation to wood depending on carbon gain and nutrient supply.
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Adaptations of plants to phosphorus (P) deficiency include reduced investment of leaf P in storage (orthophosphates in vacuoles), nucleic acids and membrane lipids. Yet, it is unclear how these adaptations are associated with plant ecological strategies. Five leaf P fractions (orthophosphate P, Pi ; metabolite P, PM ; nucleic acid P, PN ; lipid P, PL ; and residual P, PR ) were analysed alongside leaf economic traits among 35 Australian woody species from three habitats: one a high-P basalt-derived soil and two low-P sandstone-derived soils, one undisturbed and one disturbed by human activities with artificial P inputs. Species at the undisturbed low-P site generally exhibited lower concentrations of total leaf P ([Ptotal ]), primarily associated with lower concentrations of Pi , and PN . The relative allocation of P to each fraction varied little among sites, except that higher PL per [Ptotal ] (rPL ) was recorded at the undisturbed low-P site than at the high-P site. This higher rPL , reflecting relative allocation to membranes, was primarily associated with lower concentrations of leaf nitrogen at the undisturbed low-P site than at the high-P site. Associations between leaf P fractions and leaf nitrogen may provide a basis for understanding the variation in plant ecological strategies dependent on soil P availability.
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Fósforo , Plantas , Humanos , Australia , Fósforo/metabolismo , Plantas/metabolismo , Fosfatos/metabolismo , Nitrógeno/metabolismo , Suelo , Hojas de la Planta/metabolismoRESUMEN
Nutrient limitation may constrain the ability of recovering and mature tropical forests to serve as a carbon sink. However, it is unclear to what extent trees can utilize nutrient acquisition strategies - especially root phosphatase enzymes and mycorrhizal symbioses - to overcome low nutrient availability across secondary succession. Using a large-scale, full factorial nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization experiment of 76 plots along a secondary successional gradient in lowland wet tropical forests of Panama, we tested the extent to which root phosphatase enzyme activity and mycorrhizal colonization are flexible, and if investment shifts over succession, reflective of changing nutrient limitation. We also conducted a meta-analysis to test how tropical trees adjust these strategies in response to nutrient additions and across succession. We find that tropical trees are dynamic, adjusting investment in strategies - particularly root phosphatase - in response to changing nutrient conditions through succession. These changes reflect a shift from strong nitrogen to weak phosphorus limitation over succession. Our meta-analysis findings were consistent with our field study; we found more predictable responses of root phosphatase than mycorrhizal colonization to nutrient availability. Our findings suggest that nutrient acquisition strategies respond to nutrient availability and demand in tropical forests, likely critical for alleviating nutrient limitation.
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Bosques , Micorrizas , Nitrógeno , Nutrientes , Fósforo , Árboles , Clima Tropical , Fósforo/metabolismo , Nitrógeno/metabolismo , Micorrizas/fisiología , Nutrientes/metabolismo , Raíces de Plantas/metabolismo , Raíces de Plantas/microbiología , Monoéster Fosfórico Hidrolasas/metabolismo , PanamáRESUMEN
Forests play a crucial role in global carbon cycling by absorbing and storing significant amounts of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Although boreal forests contribute to approximately 45% of the total forest carbon sink, tree growth and soil carbon sequestration are constrained by nutrient availability. Here, we examine if long-term nutrient input enhances tree productivity and whether this leads to carbon storage or whether stimulated microbial decomposition of organic matter limits soil carbon accumulation. Over six decades, nitrogen, phosphorus, and calcium were supplied to a Pinus sylvestris-dominated boreal forest. We found that nitrogen fertilization alone or together with calcium and/or phosphorus increased tree biomass production by 50% and soil carbon sequestration by 65% compared to unfertilized plots. However, the nonlinear relationship observed between tree productivity and soil carbon stock across treatments suggests microbial regulation. When phosphorus was co-applied with nitrogen, it acidified the soil, increased fungal biomass, altered microbial community composition, and enhanced biopolymer degradation capabilities. While no evidence of competition between ectomycorrhizal and saprotrophic fungi has been observed, key functional groups with the potential to reduce carbon stocks were identified. In contrast, when nitrogen was added without phosphorus, it increased soil carbon sequestration because microbial activity was likely limited by phosphorus availability. In conclusion, the addition of nitrogen to boreal forests may contribute to global warming mitigation, but this effect is context dependent.
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Carbono , Fertilizantes , Nitrógeno , Fósforo , Microbiología del Suelo , Suelo , Fósforo/metabolismo , Suelo/química , Nitrógeno/metabolismo , Fertilizantes/análisis , Carbono/metabolismo , Secuestro de Carbono , Biomasa , Taiga , Pinus sylvestris/crecimiento & desarrollo , Pinus sylvestris/metabolismo , Pinus sylvestris/microbiología , Bosques , Árboles/crecimiento & desarrollo , Árboles/metabolismo , Calcio/metabolismo , Calcio/análisisRESUMEN
Resource demand by soil microorganisms critically influences microbial metabolism and then influences ecosystem resilience and multifunctionality. The ecological remediation of abandoned tailings is a topic of broad interest, yet our understanding of microbial metabolic status in restored soils, particularly at the aggregate scale, remains limited. This study investigated microbial resources within soil aggregates from revegetated tailings and applied a vector model of ecoenzymatic stoichiometry to examine how different vegetation patterns (grassland, forest, or bare land control) impact microbial resource limitation. Five-year vegetation restoration significantly elevated carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) concentrations and their stoichiometric ratios in soil aggregates (approximately 2-fold), although these increases were not translated to in the microbial biomass and its stoichiometry. The activities of C- and phosphorus (P)-acquiring extracellular enzymes in these aggregates increased substantially postvegetation, with the most pronounced escalation in macroaggregates (>0.25 mm). The vector model results indicated soil microbial metabolism was colimited by C and P, most acutely in microaggregates (<0.25 mm). This colimitation was exacerbated by monotypic vegetation cover but mitigated under diversified vegetation cover. Soil nutrient stoichiometric ratios in vegetation restoration controlled microbial resource limitation, overshadowing the impact of heavy metals. Our findings underscore that optimizing resource allocation within soil aggregates through strategic revegetation can enhance microbial metabolism in tailings, which advocates for the implementation of diverse vegetation covers as a viable strategy to improve the ecological development of degraded landscapes.
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Nitrógeno , Microbiología del Suelo , Suelo , Suelo/química , Carbono/metabolismo , Fósforo/metabolismo , EcosistemaRESUMEN
There is a longstanding debate about the role of nitrogen (N) vs phosphorus (P) in limiting primary production in lakes and whether co-nutrient limitation should be considered for managing eutrophication. We evaluated nutrient limitation and eutrophication at a subcontinental scale. Using U.S. Environmental Protection Agency National Lakes Assessment data, we assessed broad-scale patterns in nutrient limitation and compared samples of all surveyed lakes and lakes resurveyed in multiple surveys. We found that N correlated more strongly with productivity in the western U.S., while P correlated more strongly in the eastern U.S. The aggregated subcontinental effect suggests the importance of factors like N-deposition, terrestrial vegetation, underlying geology, and land use for understanding drivers of nutrient dynamics in lakes. Our study showed how patterns can aggregate across subcontinental scales yet still demonstrate considerable variation when more deeply examined on an individual lake level. Overall, we found that nutrient limitation is dynamic over space and time, with most lakes being co-limited. The prevalence of co-limitation also increased from 2007 to 2017. Trophic states within each limitation category varied substantially. Our findings underscore the need for combined N and P reductions to mitigate accelerated eutrophication.
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Eutrofización , Lagos , Nitrógeno , Nutrientes , Fósforo , Estados Unidos , Monitoreo del AmbienteRESUMEN
The N2-fixing trees Alnus spp. have been widely encroaching into boreal peatlands, but the nutrient responses of native vascular plants remain unclear. Here, we compared nutrient concentrations and isotope signal of six common plants (Betula fruticosa, Salix rosmarinifolia, Vaccinium uliginosum, Rhododendron tomentosum, Chamaedaphne calyculata, and Eriophorum vaginatum) between Alnus hirsuta island and open peatland and assessed plant nutrient responses to A. hirsuta encroachment in boreal peatlands. Alnus hirsuta encroachment increased nitrogen (N) concentration of leaf, branch, and stem. Despite no significant interspecific difference in branch and stem, the increment magnitude of leaf N concentration varied among species, with greatest magnitude for R. tomentosum (55.1% ± 40.7%) and lowest for E. vaginatum (9.80% ± 4.40%) and B. fruticosa (18.4% ± 10.7%). Except for E. vaginatum, the significant increase in δ15N occurred for all organs of shrubs, with interspecific differences in change of leaf δ15N. According to the mass balance equation involving leaf δ15N, R. tomentosum and E. vaginatum, respectively, obtained highest (40.5% ± 19.8%) and lowest proportions (-14.0% ± 30.5%) of N from A. hirsuta. Moreover, the increment magnitudes of leaf N concentration showed a positive linear relationship with the proportion of N from A. hirsuta. In addition, A. hirsuta encroachment reduced leaf phosphorus (P) concentration of deciduous shrubs (i.e., B. fruticosa, S. rosmarinifolia, and V. uliginosum), thus increasing N:P ratio. These findings indicate that Alnus encroachment improves native plant N status and selectively intensifies P limitation of native deciduous shrubs, and highlight that the N acquisition from the symbiotic N2-fixing system regulates plant N responses in boreal peatlands.
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Alnus , Hojas de la Planta , Nitrógeno/metabolismo , Árboles , Fijación del Nitrógeno , Suelo/químicaRESUMEN
Deciphering the pivotal components of nutrient metabolism in compost is of paramount importance. To this end, ecoenzymatic stoichiometry, enzyme vector modeling, and statistical analysis were employed to explore the impact of exogenous ore improver on nutrient changes throughout the livestock composting process. The total phosphorus increased from 12.86 to 18.72 g kg-1, accompanied by a marked neutralized pH with ore improver, resulting in the Carbon-, nitrogen-, and phosphorus-related enzyme activities decreases. However, the potential C:P and N:P acquisition activities represented by ln(ßG + CB): ln(ALP) and ln(NAG): ln(ALP), were increased with ore improver addition. Based on the ecoenzymatic stoiometry theory, these changes reflect a decreasing trend in the relative P/N limitation, with pH and total phosphorus as the decisive factors. Our study showed that the practical employment of eco stoichiometry could benefit the manure composting process. Moreover, we should also consider the ecological effects from pH for the waste material utilization in sustainable agriculture.
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Compostaje , Ecosistema , Animales , Estiércol , Ganado/metabolismo , Suelo , Nitrógeno/análisis , Carbono/metabolismo , FósforoRESUMEN
Soil enzyme carbon (C): nitrogen (N): phosphorous (P) stoichiometry and their vector model has been widely used to elucidate the balance between microbial nutrient requirements and soil nutrient availability. However, limited knowledge is available on the dynamics of soil enzyme stoichiometry and microbial nutrient limitation following afforestation, especially in the economic forest. In this study, the effects of citrus plantation on C: N: P stoichiometry were assessed through a comparative study between cropland and citrus plantations with varying durations of afforestation (i.e., 3, 15, 25, and 35 years). It was found that the C, N, and P contents in the soil (SOC, STN, and STP), microbial biomass (MBC, MBN, and MBP), as well as the activities of C-, N-, and P-acquiring enzymes (BG, NAG, and AP), were 1.02-2.51 times higher than those in cropland. Additionally, C, N, and P contents in soil and microbial biomass increased consistently with increasing afforestation time. While the activities of C-, N-, and P-acquiring enzymes increased from 3 years to 25 years and then significantly decreased. In addition to NAG: AP, the stoichiometry of C, N, and P in soil (SOC: STN, SOC: STP, and STN: STP) and microbial biomass (MBC: MBN, MBC: MBP, and MBN: MBP), along with BG: NAG, exhibited a decline of 7.69-27.38% compared to cropland. Moreover, the majority of the C: N: P stoichiometry in soil, microbial biomass, and enzymes consistently decreased with increasing afforestation time, except for SOC: STN and NAG: AP, which exhibited an opposite trend. Furthermore, a significant decrease in microbial carbon limitation and an increase in microbial nitrogen limitation were observed with increasing afforestation time. Collectively, the dynamic of microbial nutrient limitation was primarily influenced by the interaction between soil nutrients and edaphic factors. The findings suggest that with the increasing duration of citrus plantation, it is crucial to focus on nitrogen (N) fertilization while maintaining a delicate balance between fertilization strategies and soil acidity levels.
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Carbono , Citrus , Nitrógeno , Fósforo , Microbiología del Suelo , Suelo , Nitrógeno/análisis , Nitrógeno/metabolismo , Fósforo/análisis , Fósforo/metabolismo , Suelo/química , Carbono/análisis , Carbono/metabolismo , Biomasa , AgriculturaRESUMEN
Nutrient acquisition is crucial for oceanic microbes, and competitive solutions to solve this challenge have evolved among a range of unicellular protists. However, solitary solutions are not the only approach found in natural populations. A diverse array of oceanic protists form temporary or even long-lasting attachments to other protists and marine aggregates. Do these planktonic consortia provide benefits to their members? Here, we use empirical and modeling approaches to evaluate whether the relationship between a large centric diatom, Coscinodiscus wailesii, and a ciliate epibiont, Pseudovorticella coscinodisci, provides nutrient flux benefits to the host diatom. We find that fluid flows generated by ciliary beating can increase nutrient flux to a diatom cell surface four to 10 times that of a still cell without ciliate epibionts. This cosmopolitan species of diatom does not form consortia in all environments but frequently joins such consortia in nutrient-depleted waters. Our results demonstrate that symbiotic consortia provide a cooperative alternative of comparable or greater magnitude to sinking for enhancement of nutrient acquisition in challenging environments.
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Océanos y Mares , Simbiosis , Cilióforos/fisiología , Diatomeas/citología , Diatomeas/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Nutrientes/análisis , Nutrientes/metabolismo , Fitoplancton/citología , Fitoplancton/fisiología , Agua de Mar/químicaRESUMEN
Diet formulation in a pasture-based dairy system is a challenge as the quality and quantity of available pasture, which generally constitutes the base diet, is constantly changing. The objective of this paper is to cover a more in-depth review of the nutritional characteristics of pasture-based diets, identifying potential system, plant, and animal factors that condition pasture dietary inclusion in dairy cows. In practice, there is a wide diversity of pasture-based systems with predominant to minimal use of pasture requiring a more specific classification that potentially considers the amount and time of access to pasture, access to housing, length of grazing season, seasonality of calving, and level and method of supplementation. There are important differences in the nutritional quality between pasture species and even cultivars. However, under management practices that promote maintenance of pasture in a vegetative state as well as controlling the availability of pasture, it is possible to achieve high dry matter intakes (â¼2.9%-3.4% of live weight) of pasture with moderate to high diet energy density, protein supply, and digestibility. The amount of pasture to include in the diet will depend on several factors, such as the type of production system, the cost of supplementary feeds, and the farmer's objectives, but inclusions of â¼40% to 50% of the diet seem to potentially reduce costs while apparently not limiting voluntary feed intake. Considering that there seems to be a continuum of intermediate management systems, a better understanding of the factors inherent to the feed ingredients used, as well as the use of nutrients by cows, and potential interactions between animal × system should be addressed in greater depth. This requires a meta-analysis approach, but given the diversity of the pasture-based system in practice, the existing information is highly fragmented. A clear definition of "subsystems" is necessary to direct the future research and development of mechanistic models.
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Lactancia , Leche , Animales , Bovinos , Femenino , Humanos , Alimentación Animal/análisis , Industria Lechera/métodos , Dieta/veterinaria , Ingestión de Alimentos , Leche/metabolismoRESUMEN
The extensive utilization of zinc oxide nanoparticles in consumer products and the industry has led to their substantial entry into the soil through air and surface runoff transportation, which causes ecotoxicity in agro-ecosystems and detrimental effects on crop production. Nanobubbles (diameter size < 1 µm) have many advantages, such as a high surface area, rapid mass transfer, and long retention time. In this study, wheat seedlings were irrigated with a 500 mg L-1 zinc oxide nanoparticle solution delivered in the form of nanobubble watering (nanobubble-ZnO-NPs). We found that nanobubble watering improved the growth and nutrient status of wheat exposed to zinc oxide nanoparticles, as evidenced by increased total foliar nitrogen and phosphorus, along with enhanced leaf dry mass per area. This effect can be attributed to nanobubbles disassembling zinc oxide aggregates formed due to soil organic carbon, thereby mitigating nutrient absorption limitations in plants. Furthermore, nanobubbles improved the capability of soil oxygen input, leading to increased root activity and glycolysis efficiency in wheat roots. This work provides valuable insights into the influence of nanobubble watering on soil quality and crop production and offers an innovative approach for agricultural irrigation that enhances the effectiveness and efficiency of water application.
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Nanopartículas , Contaminantes del Suelo , Óxido de Zinc , Triticum , Carbono , Ecosistema , SueloRESUMEN
Sequestering farmland for secondary succession is an effective method of restoring ecosystem services to degraded farmland, but long-term secondary succession often alters ecosystem environments, resources, and substrate stoichiometry. Currently, it is not known how resource changes and stoichiometric imbalances due to secondary succession affect soil microbial community structure and function, hindering our understanding of the natural resilience for degraded ecosystems. Here, we assessed nutrient limitation elements, community structure, metabolic functions, co-occurrence network complexity, and community stability of soil microorganisms during secondary succession of abandoned farmlands on the Loess Plateau. Results showed that secondary succession significantly altered plant characteristics and soil properties, as well as causing stoichiometry imbalances in nutrient resources. Along the secondary succession chronosequence, microbial nutrient metabolism shifted from phosphorus (P) limitation to carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) co-limitation. Microbial diversity, eutrophic flora, plant growth-promoting bacteria, and metabolism functional groups increased significantly during the 20 years after the abandonment of the farmlands, but decreased significantly with long-term succession. However, oligotrophic flora and P-solubilizing bacteria became dominant after 30 years of secondary succession on abandoned farmlands. The topological features of microbial co-occurring networks, including nodes, degree, closeness, betweenness, and eigenvector complexity, natural connectivity, and community stability first increased and then decreased with secondary succession. Correlation and random forest analyses indicated that secondary succession-induced stoichiometry imbalances in C:N and N:P, as well as changes in soil organic C and lignin phenols, were the key factors influencing microbial community structure and function. Overall, these results enhance our understanding of the adaptation strategies of soil microbial communities in ecologically managed regions to changes in ecosystem resources and stoichiometric imbalances.
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Alpine ecosystems are important terrestrial carbon (C) pools, and microbial decomposers play a key role in litter decomposition. Microbial metabolic limitations in these ecosystems, however, remain unclear. The objectives of this study aim to elucidate the characteristics of microbial nutrient limitation and their C use efficiency (CUE), and to evaluate their response to environmental factors. Five ecological indicators were utilized to assess and compare the degree of microbial elemental homeostasis and the nutrient limitations of the microbial communities among varying stages of litter decomposition (L, F, and H horizon) along an altitudinal gradient (2800, 3000, 3250, and 3500 m) under uniform vegetation (Abies fabri) on Gongga Mountain, eastern Tibetan Plateau. In this study, microorganisms in the litter reached a strictly homeostatic of C content exclusively during the middle stage of litter decomposition (F horizon). Based on the stoichiometry of soil enzymes, we observed that microbial N- and P-limitation increased during litter degradation, but that P-limitation was stronger than N-limitation at the late stages of degradation (H horizon). Furthermore, an increase in microbial CUE corresponded with a reduction in microbial C-limitation. Additionally, redundancy analysis (RDA) based on forward selection further showed that microbial biomass C (MBC) is closely associated with the enzyme activities and their ratios, and MBC was also an important factor in characterizing changes in microbial nutrient limitation and CUE. Our findings suggest that variations in MBC, rather than N- and P-related components, predominantly influence microbial metabolic processes during litter decomposition on Gongga Mountain, eastern Tibetan Plateau.