Can repeated soil amendment with biogas digestates increase soil suppressiveness toward non-specific soil-borne pathogens in agricultural lands?

Author(s):  
L. M. Manici ◽  
F. Caputo ◽  
G. A. Cappelli ◽  
E. Ceotto

Abstract Soil suppressiveness which is the natural ability of soil to support optimal plant growth and health is the resultant of multiple soil microbial components; which implies many difficulties when estimating this soil condition. Microbial benefits for plant health from repeated digestate applications were assessed in three experimental sites surrounding anaerobic biogas plants in an intensively cultivated area of northern Italy. A 2-yr trial was performed in 2017 and 2018 by performing an in-pot plant growth assay, using soil samples taken from two fields for each experimental site, of which one had been repeatedly amended with anaerobic biogas digestate and the other had not. These fields were similar in management and crop sequences (maize was the recurrent crop) for the last 10 yr. Plant growth response in the bioassay was expressed as plant biomass production, root colonization frequency by soil-borne fungi were estimated to evaluate the impact of soil-borne pathogens on plant growth, abundance of Pseudomonas and actinomycetes populations in rhizosphere were estimated as beneficial soil microbial indicators. Repeated soil amendment with digestate increased significantly soil capacity to support plant biomass production as compared to unamended control in both the years. Findings supported evidence that this increase was principally attributable to a higher natural ability of digestate-amended soils to reduce root infection by saprophytic soil-borne pathogens whose inoculum was increased by the recurrent maize cultivation. Pseudomonas and actinomycetes were always more abundant in digestate-amended soils suggesting that both these large bacterial groups were involved in the increase of their natural capacity to control soil-borne pathogens (soil suppressiveness).

2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (25) ◽  
pp. 12550-12557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaynee E. Hart ◽  
Stuart Sullivan ◽  
Paweł Hermanowicz ◽  
Jan Petersen ◽  
L. Aranzazú Diaz-Ramos ◽  
...  

The ability to enhance photosynthetic capacity remains a recognized bottleneck to improving plant productivity. Phototropin blue light receptors (phot1 and phot2) optimize photosynthetic efficiency in Arabidopsis thaliana by coordinating multiple light-capturing processes. In this study, we explore the potential of using protein engineering to improve photoreceptor performance and thereby plant growth. We demonstrate that targeted mutagenesis can decrease or increase the photocycle lifetime of Arabidopsis phototropins in vitro and show that these variants can be used to reduce or extend the duration of photoreceptor activation in planta. Our findings show that slowing the phototropin photocycle enhanced several light-capturing responses, while accelerating it reduced phototropin’s sensitivity for chloroplast accumulation movement. Moreover, plants engineered to have a slow-photocycling variant of phot1 or phot2 displayed increased biomass production under low-light conditions as a consequence of their improved sensitivity. Together, these findings demonstrate the feasibility of engineering photoreceptors to manipulate plant growth and offer additional opportunities to enhance photosynthetic competence, particularly under suboptimal light regimes.


1993 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 1223-1232 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Paré ◽  
Keith Van Cleve

Soil nutrient availability was assessed on unharvested white spruce (Piceaglauca (Moench) Voss) sites, on a recently harvested site and on 14-year-old postharvested sites stratified into four different regeneration types defined by surface soil conditions and colonizing species. These values were compared with field aboveground biomass production that had been estimated in a previous study and with biomass production of bioassay seedlings. All sites were upland and south facing. On this range of sites, laboratory net N mineralization was the soil characteristic that was the most strongly associated with plant growth in the field as well as in the greenhouse bioassay. The significance of this relationship was mainly caused by the presence of sites regenerating to aspen (Populustremuloides Michx.) which showed high plant biomass production and high soil N availability. Total soil N content, cumulative field soil temperature and soil moisture content were poorly related to N mineralization estimates and to plant biomass production. Soil temperature had an effect on N mineralization and plant growth only when sites where the forest floor had been scraped during the harvesting operations, were included in the computations. Despite a higher soil temperature, these sites showed decreased N mineralization rates and decreased plant biomass production. These results suggest that on south facing postharvested white spruce sites (i) soil temperature does not show enough variability to be an important factor controlling nutrient availability and plant growth unless the soil is severely disturbed, (ii) the rate of N mineralization is controlled by a small pool of rapidly cycling N which is poorly related to forest floor total N concentrations, and (iii) N availability and vegetation production vary with regeneration type.


2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 774-786
Author(s):  
Jiankun Bai ◽  
Yuchen Meng ◽  
Ruikun Gou ◽  
Jiacheng Lyu ◽  
Zheng Dai ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 264 ◽  
pp. 110450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacek Antonkiewicz ◽  
Anna Popławska ◽  
Beata Kołodziej ◽  
Krystyna Ciarkowska ◽  
Florian Gambuś ◽  
...  

Weed Science ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kerry K. Steward

Hydrilla [Hydrilla verticillata(L. f.) Royle ♯ HYLLI] was cultured in flowing water in outside aquaria on rooting media differing in fertility and texture. Nutrient content was determined for rooting media at the beginning of the experiment and for plant tissues at harvest. Growth, as measured by rates of stem elongation, areal coverage of aquaria by plants, and biomass accrual, was highly related to N-, P-, and K-fertility of rooting media. Rooting media were the most important source of phosphorous since water supplies were not adequate to support plant growth. There was evidence of P-deficiencies in plants grown on infertile rooting media. Both N and K were adequately supplied from either water, rooting media, or both. Production of plant biomass was most closely related to P-levels in tissues which were closely related to supplies in rooting media. Pretest soil N (comparable to preestablishment conditions) was best related to biomass production, indicating that growth and establishment of hydrilla may be predictable through assessment of hydrosoil fertility. The need for sampling and analytical procedures to assess fertility is emphasized.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 354-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Naseem ◽  
Özge Osmanoglu ◽  
Thomas Dandekar

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