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More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars

The role of biochar–microbe interaction in plant rhizosphere mediating soil-borne disease suppression has been poorly understood for plant health in field conditions. Chinese ginseng (Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer) is widely cultivated in Alfisols across Northeast China, being often stressed severely by...

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Autores principales: Liu, Cheng, Xia, Rong, Tang, Man, Liu, Xiaoyu, Bian, Rongjun, Yang, Li, Zheng, Jufeng, Cheng, Kun, Zhang, Xuhui, Drosos, Marios, Li, Lianqing, Shan, Shengdao, Joseph, Stephen, Pan, Genxing
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9792985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36583057
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1065313
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author Liu, Cheng
Xia, Rong
Tang, Man
Liu, Xiaoyu
Bian, Rongjun
Yang, Li
Zheng, Jufeng
Cheng, Kun
Zhang, Xuhui
Drosos, Marios
Li, Lianqing
Shan, Shengdao
Joseph, Stephen
Pan, Genxing
author_facet Liu, Cheng
Xia, Rong
Tang, Man
Liu, Xiaoyu
Bian, Rongjun
Yang, Li
Zheng, Jufeng
Cheng, Kun
Zhang, Xuhui
Drosos, Marios
Li, Lianqing
Shan, Shengdao
Joseph, Stephen
Pan, Genxing
author_sort Liu, Cheng
collection PubMed
description The role of biochar–microbe interaction in plant rhizosphere mediating soil-borne disease suppression has been poorly understood for plant health in field conditions. Chinese ginseng (Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer) is widely cultivated in Alfisols across Northeast China, being often stressed severely by pathogenic diseases. In this study, the topsoil of a continuously cropped ginseng farm was amended at 20 t ha(–1), respectively, with manure biochar (PB), wood biochar (WB), and maize residue biochar (MB) in comparison to conventional manure compost (MC). Post-amendment changes in edaphic properties of bulk topsoil and the rhizosphere, in root growth and quality, and disease incidence were examined with field observations and physicochemical, molecular, and biochemical assays. In the 3 years following the amendment, the increases over MC in root biomass were parallel to the overall fertility improvement, being greater with MB and WB than with PB. Differently, the survival rate of ginseng plants increased insignificantly with PB but significantly with WB (14%) and MB (21%), while ginseng root quality was unchanged with WB but improved with PB (32%) and MB (56%). For the rhizosphere at harvest following 3 years of growing, the total content of phenolic acids from root exudate decreased by 56, 35, and 45% with PB, WB, and MB, respectively, over MC. For the rhizosphere microbiome, total fungal and bacterial abundance both was unchanged under WB but significantly increased under MB (by 200 and 38%), respectively, over MC. At the phyla level, abundances of arbuscular mycorrhizal and Bryobacter as potentially beneficial microbes were elevated while those of Fusarium and Ilyonectria as potentially pathogenic microbes were reduced, with WB and MB over MC. Moreover, rhizosphere fungal network complexity was enhanced insignificantly under PB but significantly under WB moderately and MB greatly, over MC. Overall, maize biochar exerted a great impact rather on rhizosphere microbial community composition and networking of functional groups, particularly fungi, and thus plant defense than on soil fertility and root growth.
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spelling pubmed-97929852022-12-28 More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars Liu, Cheng Xia, Rong Tang, Man Liu, Xiaoyu Bian, Rongjun Yang, Li Zheng, Jufeng Cheng, Kun Zhang, Xuhui Drosos, Marios Li, Lianqing Shan, Shengdao Joseph, Stephen Pan, Genxing Front Microbiol Microbiology The role of biochar–microbe interaction in plant rhizosphere mediating soil-borne disease suppression has been poorly understood for plant health in field conditions. Chinese ginseng (Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer) is widely cultivated in Alfisols across Northeast China, being often stressed severely by pathogenic diseases. In this study, the topsoil of a continuously cropped ginseng farm was amended at 20 t ha(–1), respectively, with manure biochar (PB), wood biochar (WB), and maize residue biochar (MB) in comparison to conventional manure compost (MC). Post-amendment changes in edaphic properties of bulk topsoil and the rhizosphere, in root growth and quality, and disease incidence were examined with field observations and physicochemical, molecular, and biochemical assays. In the 3 years following the amendment, the increases over MC in root biomass were parallel to the overall fertility improvement, being greater with MB and WB than with PB. Differently, the survival rate of ginseng plants increased insignificantly with PB but significantly with WB (14%) and MB (21%), while ginseng root quality was unchanged with WB but improved with PB (32%) and MB (56%). For the rhizosphere at harvest following 3 years of growing, the total content of phenolic acids from root exudate decreased by 56, 35, and 45% with PB, WB, and MB, respectively, over MC. For the rhizosphere microbiome, total fungal and bacterial abundance both was unchanged under WB but significantly increased under MB (by 200 and 38%), respectively, over MC. At the phyla level, abundances of arbuscular mycorrhizal and Bryobacter as potentially beneficial microbes were elevated while those of Fusarium and Ilyonectria as potentially pathogenic microbes were reduced, with WB and MB over MC. Moreover, rhizosphere fungal network complexity was enhanced insignificantly under PB but significantly under WB moderately and MB greatly, over MC. Overall, maize biochar exerted a great impact rather on rhizosphere microbial community composition and networking of functional groups, particularly fungi, and thus plant defense than on soil fertility and root growth. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-12-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9792985/ /pubmed/36583057 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1065313 Text en Copyright © 2022 Liu, Xia, Tang, Liu, Bian, Yang, Zheng, Cheng, Zhang, Drosos, Li, Shan, Joseph and Pan. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Liu, Cheng
Xia, Rong
Tang, Man
Liu, Xiaoyu
Bian, Rongjun
Yang, Li
Zheng, Jufeng
Cheng, Kun
Zhang, Xuhui
Drosos, Marios
Li, Lianqing
Shan, Shengdao
Joseph, Stephen
Pan, Genxing
More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars
title More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars
title_full More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars
title_fullStr More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars
title_full_unstemmed More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars
title_short More microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: A field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars
title_sort more microbial manipulation and plant defense than soil fertility for biochar in food production: a field experiment of replanted ginseng with different biochars
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9792985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36583057
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1065313
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