SANREM CRSP is supported by the United States Agency for International Development and the generous support of the American people through Cooperative Agreement No. EPP-A-00-04-00013-00
The SANREM CRSP is managed by the Office of International Research, Education, and Development at Virginia Tech.
Soil Metagenomics to Construct Indicators of Soil Degradation
Principal investigator |
Karen Garrett, associate professor, Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University. Partners: LTRAs 2, 3, and 4. |
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Overview |
Soil degradation is one of the most important problems for sustainable agriculture worldwide. Because tropical soils have been studied less than temperate soils, understanding and developing methods for stopping tropical soil degradation is an important topic for the SANREM CRSP. SANREM also provides a unique social science context for studying human impacts on soil degradation. The program’s External Evaluation Panel in 2007 recommended applying soil metagenomic approaches to tropical soils to identify indicators of soil degradation. Ultimately, more complete profiles of soil communities will also contribute to the development of methods to foster disease-suppressive soils and soil communities that optimize other microbes’ contributions to plant health and productivity. One of the most exciting outcomes of the biotechnology revolution in genomics is researchers’ ability to characterize soil microbial communities with much greater coverage. New technologies such as 454 sequencing allow evaluation of DNA from millions of microbes in soil samples, including species previously overlooked because they could not be cultured using standard techniques. While the first studies in soil metagenomics emphasized extensive analysis of a small number of samples, a research group at Kansas State University has developed techniques to add molecular tags and simultaneously process many tagged replicate soil samples. This allows comparisons of soil microbial communities in carefully designed replicated experiments. The objectives of this research are to:
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