Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Crop rotation and native microbiome inoculation restore soil capacity to suppress a root disease

Yanyan Zhou, Zhen Yang, Jinguang Liu, Xudong Li, Xingxiang Wang, Chuan‐Chao Dai, Taolin Zhang, Víctor J. Carrión, Zhong Wei, Fuliang Cao, Manuel Delgado‐Baquerizo, Xiaogang Li

Nature Communications · 2023

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Summary

It is widely known that some soils have strong levels of disease suppression and prevent the establishment of pathogens in the rhizosphere of plants. However, what soils are better suppressing disease, and how management can help us to boost disease suppression remain unclear. Here, we used field, greenhouse and laboratory experiments to investigate the effect of management (monocropping and rotation) on the capacity of rhizosphere microbiomes in suppressing peanut root rot disease. Compared with crop rotations, monocropping resulted in microbial assemblies that were less effective in suppressing root rot diseases. Further, the depletion of key rhizosphere taxa in monocropping, which were at a disadvantage in the competition for limited exudates resources, reduced capacity to protect plant

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-43926-4
Catalogue ID
SNmojqlx7r-ptx90j
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