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Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna

Soil amendments with plant materials from Medicago species are widely acknowledged for a suppressive effect on plant-parasitic nematodes but their impact on beneficial components of soil nematofauna is still unknown. A study on potted tomato was carried out to investigate the short-time effects on t...

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Autores principales: Renčo, Marek, Ntalli, Nikoletta, D’Addabbo, Trifone
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7828159/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33445672
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10010145
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author Renčo, Marek
Ntalli, Nikoletta
D’Addabbo, Trifone
author_facet Renčo, Marek
Ntalli, Nikoletta
D’Addabbo, Trifone
author_sort Renčo, Marek
collection PubMed
description Soil amendments with plant materials from Medicago species are widely acknowledged for a suppressive effect on plant-parasitic nematodes but their impact on beneficial components of soil nematofauna is still unknown. A study on potted tomato was carried out to investigate the short-time effects on the overall nematofauna of dry biomasses from six different Medicago species, i.e., M. sativa, M. heyniana, M. hybrida, M. lupulina, M. murex and M. truncatula, incorporated to natural soil at 10, 20, or 40 g kg(−1) soil rates. All amendments resulted in a significant decrease of the total nematofauna biomass, whereas total abundance was significantly reduced only by M. heyniana, M. hybrida, and M. lupulina biomasses. Almost all the Medicago amendments significantly reduced the relative abundance of plant-parasites and root fungal feeders. All amendments significantly increased the abundance of bacterivores, whereas fungivores significantly increased only in soil amended with M. heyniana, M. lupulina and M. sativa plant materials. Mesorhabditis and Rhabditis were the most abundant genera of bacterivores, whereas Aphelenchoides and Aphelenchus prevailed among the fungivores. Predators were poorly influenced by all the tested Medicago biomasses, whereas the abundance of omnivores was negatively affected by M. heyniana and M. lupulina. Values of the Maturity Index and Sum Maturity Index were reduced by treatments with M. heyniana, M. hybrida, M. lupulina and M. sativa plant materials, whereas most of the tested amendments decreased values of the Channel Index while increasing those of the Enrichment Index. Enrichment and bacterivore footprints raised following soil addition with Medicago biomasses, whereas composite and fungivore footprints were significantly reduced. According to their overall positive effects on soil nematofauna, amendments with Medicago plant materials or their formulated derivatives could represent an additional tool for a sustainable management of plant-parasitic nematodes.
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spelling pubmed-78281592021-01-25 Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna Renčo, Marek Ntalli, Nikoletta D’Addabbo, Trifone Plants (Basel) Article Soil amendments with plant materials from Medicago species are widely acknowledged for a suppressive effect on plant-parasitic nematodes but their impact on beneficial components of soil nematofauna is still unknown. A study on potted tomato was carried out to investigate the short-time effects on the overall nematofauna of dry biomasses from six different Medicago species, i.e., M. sativa, M. heyniana, M. hybrida, M. lupulina, M. murex and M. truncatula, incorporated to natural soil at 10, 20, or 40 g kg(−1) soil rates. All amendments resulted in a significant decrease of the total nematofauna biomass, whereas total abundance was significantly reduced only by M. heyniana, M. hybrida, and M. lupulina biomasses. Almost all the Medicago amendments significantly reduced the relative abundance of plant-parasites and root fungal feeders. All amendments significantly increased the abundance of bacterivores, whereas fungivores significantly increased only in soil amended with M. heyniana, M. lupulina and M. sativa plant materials. Mesorhabditis and Rhabditis were the most abundant genera of bacterivores, whereas Aphelenchoides and Aphelenchus prevailed among the fungivores. Predators were poorly influenced by all the tested Medicago biomasses, whereas the abundance of omnivores was negatively affected by M. heyniana and M. lupulina. Values of the Maturity Index and Sum Maturity Index were reduced by treatments with M. heyniana, M. hybrida, M. lupulina and M. sativa plant materials, whereas most of the tested amendments decreased values of the Channel Index while increasing those of the Enrichment Index. Enrichment and bacterivore footprints raised following soil addition with Medicago biomasses, whereas composite and fungivore footprints were significantly reduced. According to their overall positive effects on soil nematofauna, amendments with Medicago plant materials or their formulated derivatives could represent an additional tool for a sustainable management of plant-parasitic nematodes. MDPI 2021-01-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7828159/ /pubmed/33445672 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10010145 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Renčo, Marek
Ntalli, Nikoletta
D’Addabbo, Trifone
Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna
title Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna
title_full Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna
title_fullStr Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna
title_full_unstemmed Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna
title_short Short-Time Impact of Soil Amendments with Medicago Plant Materials on Soil Nematofauna
title_sort short-time impact of soil amendments with medicago plant materials on soil nematofauna
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7828159/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33445672
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10010145
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