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Carbon Source-Dependent Effects of Anaerobic Soil Disinfestation on Soil Microbiome and Suppression of Rhizoctonia solani AG-5 and Pratylenchus penetrans.
- Source :
-
Phytopathology [Phytopathology] 2016 Sep; Vol. 106 (9), pp. 1015-28. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jul 11. - Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- The effect of carbon source on efficacy of anaerobic soil disinfestation (ASD) toward suppression of apple root infection by Rhizoctonia solani AG-5 and Pratylenchus penetrans was examined. Orchard grass (GR), rice bran (RB), ethanol (ET), composted steer manure (CM), and Brassica juncea seed meal (SM) were used as ASD carbon inputs, with plant assays conducted in natural and pasteurized orchard soils. Subsequent studies investigated the effect of GR application rate used in ASD on control of these pathogens. In general, apple root infection by R. solani AG-5 was significantly lower in ET, GR, RB, and SM ASD treatments compared with the control. Among different ASD treatments, apple seedling growth was significantly greater when GR or SM was used as the carbon input relative to all other ASD treatments. R. solani AG-5 DNA abundance was significantly reduced in all ASD treatments, regardless of amendment type, compared with the control. In independent experiments, ASD-GR was consistently superior to ASD-CM for limiting pathogen activity in soils. ASD treatment with a grass input rate of 20 t ha(-1) provided superior suppression of P. penetrans but grass application rate did not affect ASD efficacy in control of R. solani AG-5. The soil microbiome from ASD-GR-treated soils was clearly distinct from the control and ASD-CM-treated soils. In contrast, composition of the microbiome from control and ASD-CM-treated soils could not be differentiated. Comparative results from pasteurized and nonpasteurized soils suggest that there is potential for GR based ASD treatment to recruit microbial elements that persist over the anaerobic phase of soil incubation, which may functionally contribute to disease suppression. When ASD was conducted with GR, microbial diversity was markedly reduced relative to the control or ASD-CM soil suggesting that this parameter, typically associated with system resilience, was not instrumental to the function of ASD-induced soil suppressiveness.
- Subjects :
- Anaerobiosis
Animals
Cattle
Ethanol
Fertilizers
Male
Malus microbiology
Malus parasitology
Manure
Mustard Plant chemistry
Oryza chemistry
Pasteurization
Plant Diseases microbiology
Plant Diseases parasitology
Plant Roots drug effects
Plant Roots microbiology
Plant Roots parasitology
Poaceae chemistry
Rhizoctonia growth & development
Seedlings drug effects
Seedlings microbiology
Seedlings parasitology
Soil parasitology
Soil Microbiology
Tylenchoidea growth & development
Carbon pharmacology
Malus drug effects
Microbiota drug effects
Plant Diseases prevention & control
Rhizoctonia drug effects
Tylenchoidea drug effects
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0031-949X
- Volume :
- 106
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Phytopathology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 27143411
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1094/PHYTO-12-15-0329-R