“…Long‐term fertilization has also been shown to change microbial community composition (Fanin, Hättenschwiler, Schimann, & Fromin, ; Zhen et al., ), and these changes were either determined by the carbon (C) and/or N availability (Ramirez, Lauber, Knight, Bradford, & Fierer, ) or soil pH (Rousk et al., ) changed by N input. In addition, long‐term fertilization can both increase (Zhou et al., ) and decrease (Xun et al., ) the relative abundance of some copiotrophic bacteria, but had adverse effects on the abundance of some oligotrophic bacteria. These inconsistent patterns are attributed to differences in soil type, management regime, crop type, fertilizer application rate, and other biotic and abiotic factors (Hartmann, Frey, Mayer, Mäder, & Widmer, ; Lopes et al., ; Lupwayi, Clayton, O'Donovan, & Grant, ).…”