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Cited by 47 publications
(41 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
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“…They noted that the ratio of bacteria to fungi was significantly reduced with greenwaste amendment, showing a large response of the fungal community that is similar to what is shown in this study. Similarly, Cookson et al (25) presented results showing a significant increase in total PLFAs with the application of hay, which matches the findings of Diedhiou et al (11) and this study, indicating higher microbial diversity in residue-amended intercropped soils.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…They noted that the ratio of bacteria to fungi was significantly reduced with greenwaste amendment, showing a large response of the fungal community that is similar to what is shown in this study. Similarly, Cookson et al (25) presented results showing a significant increase in total PLFAs with the application of hay, which matches the findings of Diedhiou et al (11) and this study, indicating higher microbial diversity in residue-amended intercropped soils.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…In comparison to fungal communities, bacterial communities showed fewer significant responses, with OTUs of only Chitinophaga and "Candidatus Koribacter" consistently responding to woody-shrub intercropping. Our findings of increased diversity in soil microbial communities following application of shrub residue expand upon those of previous work done at the same sites using PLFA analysis (11). That previous study noted an increase in all PLFA types (bacterial and fungal) in shrub-crop plots compared to sole-crop plots and a higher response of fungal PLFAs than of bacterial PLFAs to residue amendment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…Previous research by Diedhiou et al (2009) in a lab incubation study showed that decomposition of P. reticulatum and G. senegalensis residues increased microbial biomass and diversity (as measured by fatty acid profiling) and enzyme activity in soil from beneath than outside the influence of these shrub species. Furthermore, this study reported that these shrub residues caused a shift in microbial communities that changed in the course of decomposition based on fatty acid profiling.…”
mentioning
confidence: 85%
“…For P. reticulatum at Day 210, there was no macrofaunal Table 1. Initial chemical properties of residues of G. senegalensis and P. reticulatum (n = 4) (adapted from Diedhiou et al, 2009).…”
Section: Microbial Biomass Soil Inorganic Nitrogen Enzyme Activitiementioning
confidence: 99%