Rice-crayfish farming strengthens soil nutrient cycling
en-GBde-DEes-ESfr-FR

Rice-crayfish farming strengthens soil nutrient cycling

29/06/2026 TranSpread

Using metagenomic sequencing, the study showed that integrated rice-crayfish systems increased the abundance of functional genes involved in methane oxidation, nitrogen degradation, denitrification, organic phosphorus mineralization, and phosphorus transport compared with rice monoculture. The paddy planting area within the rice-crayfish system showed stronger microbial diversity and nutrient-cycling potential than the surrounding trench area. These findings suggest that rice-crayfish farming can improve nutrient use efficiency and provide a microbial basis for designing more sustainable agricultural systems.

Rice-crayfish farming has been widely promoted as an integrated agricultural model that can combine crop production, aquaculture, and ecological management. Previous studies have shown that crayfish movement, feeding, excretion, straw incorporation, and long-term flooding can change soil organic matter, nutrient availability, and microbial activity. However, most existing research has focused on single nutrient cycles, especially carbon or nitrogen, while the combined microbial mechanisms linking carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus remain insufficiently understood. In addition, the trench area, a key habitat for crayfish and residual feed accumulation, has often been overlooked. These gaps limit understanding of how rice-crayfish systems regulate nutrient transformation and environmental performance.

A study (DOI: 10.48130/nc-0026-0003) published in Nitrogen Cycling on 13 March 2026 by Hua Wang’s team, Hunan Agricultural University, reports that rice-crayfish farming builds an interconnected microbial network that couples carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycling more strongly than rice monoculture.

The researchers compared rice monoculture with two spatially distinct zones of a long-term rice-crayfish farming system: the central paddy planting area and the peripheral trench used as crayfish habitat. Soil samples were collected after rice harvest, and metagenomic sequencing was used to identify microbial taxa and functional genes involved in carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycling. The analysis generated 8,386 Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes orthologs, including 49 carbon-cycling genes, 36 nitrogen-cycling genes, and 41 phosphorus-cycling genes. Principal coordinates analysis showed that rice-crayfish farming significantly reshaped microbial functional profiles across all three nutrient cycles. For carbon cycling, the system enriched methane-oxidizing genes, including pmoA, pmoB, and pmoC, suggesting greater microbial potential for methane oxidation. It also increased genes linked to chitin and starch degradation, reflecting inputs from crayfish molting, feed residues, rice straw, and excretion. For nitrogen cycling, nitrogen degradation and denitrification were the dominant processes. In the paddy area, genes such as glnA, gltB, gltD, and arcC increased, while denitrification genes including narG, narH, nirK, nirS, norB, and norC were also enriched, indicating accelerated nitrogen transformation. In the trench, increases in gltB, gltD, narG, nirK, and nirS suggested that the flooded crayfish habitat also contributed to nitrogen turnover, although some nitrification-related genes declined. For phosphorus cycling, rice-crayfish farming increased genes involved in organic phosphorus mineralization, including appA, phnA, phnM, and phnX, while altering phosphorus transport genes such as phnC, ugpC, pstB, pstS, and phnD. Mantel tests further identified total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and dissolved organic carbon as key environmental drivers of microbial communities and nutrient-cycling functions. Network analysis revealed tight coupling among carbon-, nitrogen-, and phosphorus-related genes, with hub genes showing strong cross-cycle correlations.

Overall, the study demonstrates that rice-crayfish farming is not only a production system but also a microbial regulation system that reorganizes soil nutrient cycling. By enhancing functional microbial diversity and coupling carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus transformations, this model may support better nutrient retention, improved phosphorus availability, and more efficient soil fertility management. The findings provide a theoretical foundation for optimizing fertilization, managing integrated paddy systems, and developing environmentally friendly rice-aquaculture practices.

###

References

DOI

10.48130/nc-0026-0003

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.48130/nc-0026-0003

Funding Information

This work was supported by the Key Technologies Research and Development Program, China (Grant No. 2022YFD2300305), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 42377319), the Department of Ecology and Environment of Hunan Province, China (Grant No. HBKYXM-2024017), the earmarked fund for HARS (Grant No. HARS-07), and the Postgraduate Scientific Research Innovation Project of Hunan Province (Grant No. LXBZZ2024133).

About Nitrogen Cycling

Nitrogen Cycling is a multidisciplinary platform for communicating advances in fundamental and applied research on the nitrogen cycle. It is dedicated to serving as an innovative, efficient, and professional platform for researchers in the field of nitrogen cycling worldwide to deliver findings from this rapidly expanding field of science.

Title of original paper: Metagenomic study on functional characteristics of soil carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycling under rice-crayfish farming
Authors: Linsen Du1,2,3, Junliang Xin2, Geng Sun1,3 & Hua Wang1,3
Journal: Nitrogen Cycling
Original Source URL: https://doi.org/10.48130/nc-0026-0003
DOI: 10.48130/nc-0026-0003
Latest article publication date: 13 March 2026
Subject of research: Not applicable
COI statement: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Attached files
  • Figure 5 Environmental drivers of (a) soil microbial functional genes, and (b) taxa in different rice farming systems. RM: rice monoculture; RCP: paddy field of rice-crayfish farming system; RCT: the peripheral trench of rice-crayfish farming system.
29/06/2026 TranSpread
Regions: North America, United States, Asia, China
Keywords: Applied science, Engineering

Disclaimer: AlphaGalileo is not responsible for the accuracy of content posted to AlphaGalileo by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the AlphaGalileo system.

Testimonials

For well over a decade, in my capacity as a researcher, broadcaster, and producer, I have relied heavily on Alphagalileo.
All of my work trips have been planned around stories that I've found on this site.
The under embargo section allows us to plan ahead and the news releases enable us to find key experts.
Going through the tailored daily updates is the best way to start the day. It's such a critical service for me and many of my colleagues.
Koula Bouloukos, Senior manager, Editorial & Production Underknown
We have used AlphaGalileo since its foundation but frankly we need it more than ever now to ensure our research news is heard across Europe, Asia and North America. As one of the UK’s leading research universities we want to continue to work with other outstanding researchers in Europe. AlphaGalileo helps us to continue to bring our research story to them and the rest of the world.
Peter Dunn, Director of Press and Media Relations at the University of Warwick
AlphaGalileo has helped us more than double our reach at SciDev.Net. The service has enabled our journalists around the world to reach the mainstream media with articles about the impact of science on people in low- and middle-income countries, leading to big increases in the number of SciDev.Net articles that have been republished.
Ben Deighton, SciDevNet

We Work Closely With...


  • The Research Council of Norway
  • SciDevNet
  • Swiss National Science Foundation
  • iesResearch
Copyright 2026 by AlphaGalileo Terms Of Use Privacy Statement