About this item
- Title
- Soil nitrogen treatment alters microbiome networks across farm niches
- Content partner
- Lincoln University
- Collection
- Lincoln University Research Archive
- Description
Agriculture is fundamental for food production, and microbiomes support agriculture through multiple essential ecosystem services. Despite the importance of individual (i.e., niche specific) agricultural microbiomes, microbiome interactions across niches are not well-understood. To observe the linkages between nearby agricultural microbiomes, multiple approaches (16S, 18S, and ITS) were used to inspect a broad coverage of niche microbiomes. Here we examined agricultural microbiome responses t...
- Format
- Research Paper
- Research format
- Journal article
- Date created
- 2022-02
- Creator
- Wang, XinYue / Reilly, Kerri / Heathcott, Rosemary / Biswas, Ambarish / Johnson, Linda J / Teasdale, Suliana / Grelet, Gwen-Aëlle / Podolyan, Anastasija / Gregorini, Pablo / Attwood, Graeme T / Palevich, Nikola / Morales, Sergio E
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/10182/14747
- Related subjects
- 16S / 18S / agriculture / amplicon sequencing / microbiome networks / microbiomes / nitrogen treatment / Agricultural land management / Agro-ecosystem function and prediction / Microbial ecology / Microbiology / Medical microbiology
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© 2022 Wang, Reilly, Heathcott, Biswas, Johnson, Teasdale, Grelet, Podolyan, Gregorini, Attwood, Palevich and Morales. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Attribution (With the exceptions noted in http://researcharchive.lincoln.ac.nz/page/rights, this metadata is available under a Creative Commons Zero license.)
You can learn more about the rights status of this item at: https://researcharchive.lincoln.ac.nz/pages/rights/en
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Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 21 March 2022, and updated 11 March 2025.
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