Haiyan Ding
Northwest A&F University
4 Papers
5 Citations
Haiyan Ding is an academic researcher from Northwest A&F University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil organic matter & Soil quality. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Hiseq Base Molecular Characterization of Soil Microbial Community, Diversity Structure, and Predictive Functional Profiling in Continuous Cucumber Planted Soil Affected by Diverse Cropping Systems in an Intensive Greenhouse Region of Northern China.
TL;DR: It is speculated that leafy crop diversification is socially acceptable, economically justifiable, and ecologically adaptable to meet the urgent demand for intensive cropping systems to promote positive feedback between crop–soil sustainable intensification.
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Different cropping systems regulate the metabolic capabilities and potential ecological functions altered by soil microbiome structure in the plastic shed mono-cropped cucumber rhizosphere
Ahmad Ali,Ahmad Ali,Muhammad Imran Ghani,Ahmed S. Elrys,Ahmed S. Elrys,Haiyan Ding,Muhammad Iqbal,Zhihui Cheng,Zucong Cai +8 more
TL;DR: The findings indicated that certain cropping systems are crucial for the sustainable development of plastic shed cucumber production by improving the potential capabilities of soil microbial communities to reduce the environmental risk of soil contaminants.
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Co-Amended Synergistic Interactions between Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi and the Organic Substrate-Induced Cucumber Yield and Fruit Quality Associated with the Regulation of the AM-Fungal Community Structure under Anthropogenic Cultivated Soil.
TL;DR: It is found that repetitively adding AM inocula with organic substrates (GS) improved the cucumber growth and physiology and the AM-organic substrate association might be a pragmatic option for use as an economic and efficient biological resource and as a newly-sustainable plant microbe mediator to enhance the regional ecosystem services and plant productivity of the anthropogenic PGVC of this region.
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Arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculum coupled with organic substrate induces synergistic effects for soil quality changes, and rhizosphere microbiome structure in long-term monocropped cucumber planted soil
TL;DR: In this paper, a high-throughput sequencing approach was used to evaluate the rhizosphere microbiome structure of bacteria in the replanted substrate of 7-years of continuous cucumber cropping.
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