Mulching of post-harvest residues and delayed planting improves fungal biodiversity in South African Eucalyptus plantations and enhances plantation productivity

Abstract

Short-rotation Eucalyptus plantations provide essential forest products, with productivity and soil health influenced by residue management and planting strategies. This study examined the effects of burning or mulching post-harvest residue followed by immediate versus delayed planting on soil fungal biodiversity, soil properties, and tree growth across four sites in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Plots were planted either three months ('immediate') or six months ('delayed') after treatment implementation. Volume measurements assessed tree growth, and soil attributes, including moisture, temperature, and nutrient levels, were analyzed. Soil samples were collected in November 2019 and March 2022, and fungal communities were analyzed through high-throughput sequencing targeting the internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) region. Data emerging from this study showed mulched plots had significantly higher tree volume, with delayed planting increasing productivity by 13.6 % at 24–36 months and 25 % at 36–48 months post-planting. Soil moisture was 1.3–2 times higher in mulched plots than in burnt plots. Mulching significantly reduced the maximum soil temperatures by 4.5–6.8 °C. Four months after treatment, burnt plots had higher pH (1.1-fold), carbon (2.2-fold), phosphate (1.6-fold) and manganese (2.5-fold). Initially, mulched plots had lower fungal biodiversity (0.81-fold) than burnt plots but surpassed them after 28 months (1.28-fold increase). Fungal community overlap declined from 83.28 % to 40.64 %, with mulching supporting higher saprotroph (1.3-fold) and symbiotroph (1.25-fold) abundances, while delayed planting increased pathotroph presence by 1.5-fold in burnt plots. These findings highlight the long-term benefits of mulching and delayed planting in enhancing fungal biodiversity, promoting beneficial microbial communities, and improving tree growth, contributing to more sustainable Eucalyptus plantation management.

Description

DATA AVAILABILITY : The high-throughput sequencing data generated in this study is available in the NCBI Sequence Read Archive (https://submit.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/subs/sra/) under accession number PRJNA1003671.

Keywords

Eucalyptus plantations, High-throughput sequencing, Post-harvest residue management, Soil health, Sustainable forestry, Tree vigour

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-15: Life on land

Citation

Bose, T., Roux, J., Titshall, L., Dovey, S.B. & Hammerbacher, A. Mulching of post-harvest residues and delayed planting improves fungal biodiversity in South African Eucalyptus plantations and enhances plantation productivity', Applied Soil Ecology, vol. 210, art. 106091, pp. 1-14, doi : 10.1016/j.apsoil.2025.106091.