Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Enhanced plant growth in the presence of earthworms correlates with changes in soil microbiota but not nutrient availability

Mark E. Hodson, Philip Brailey-Jones, W.L. Burn, Andrea L. Harper, Susan E. Hartley, Thorunn Helgason, H.F. Walker

Geoderma · 2023

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Summary

Earthworms enhance plant growth but the precise mechanism by which this occurs is not known. An understanding of the mechanism could potentially support changes in agricultural management reducing fertiliser usage and therefore costs and the carbon footprint of agriculture. We conducted a factorial experiment in which 5 strains of wheat were grown in the presence and absence of earthworms under regular watering and droughted conditions. The different wheat strains all responded in a similar fashion. Plant biomass was greater in the presence of earthworms and under regular watering. The presence of earthworms reduced the impact of drought on plant biomass and also slowed down the rate of drying of the droughted soils. Plant nutrient content (N, P, Si) showed no consistent pattern with treat

Subject
Gut microbiome & human health
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1016/j.geoderma.2023.116426
Catalogue ID
SNmoy13mct-evmldo
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