- Ekwunife, Moses Amara*
- Department of Soil Science and Land Resources Management, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19684724
Soil microorganisms are indispensable drivers of
terrestrial ecosystem functioning, yet comprehensive critical reviews that
integrate recent advances in microbial ecology with agricultural sustainability
remain limited. This critical review synthesizes current knowledge on the
functional roles of soil bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and nematodes. Microbial
activities—including nutrient cycling, organic matter decomposition, soil
aggregation, and pathogen suppression—underpin soil health and agricultural
productivity. However, these benefits are increasingly threatened by climate
change and intensive agricultural practices. The review critically evaluates
evidence for microbial contributions to global ecosystem services, estimated at
over US$1.3 billion annually, while acknowledging harmful effects such as
denitrification and pathogenicity. Key findings reveal that emerging
metagenomic evidence suggests less than 10% of soil microbial species have been
characterized, indicating substantial knowledge gaps. Mycorrhizal networks and
glomalin production represent underutilized tools for soil carbon sequestration.
Climate change and agricultural intensification are driving biotic
homogenization of soil microbial communities with unknown functional
consequences. In conclusion, sustainable agricultural management—including
conservation tillage, cover cropping, and the adoption of biological
control—must prioritize soil microbial health. Future research priorities
include metagenomic surveys of unculturable taxa, quantification of microbial
feedback to climate change, and development of region-specific microbial
inoculants.

