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1.
Effect of soil solarization on nodulation,infection by mycorrhizal fungi and yield of cowpea 总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0
S. K. Nair C. K. Peethambaran D. Geetha Kamala Nayar K. I. Wilson 《Plant and Soil》1990,125(1):153-154
Solarization of soil was found beneficial for plant growth in cowpea under field conditions. Root nodulation, infection by
mycorrhizal fungi and yield were higher in plants grown in solarized soil. These increases were to the extent of 104.7, 20.0
and 23.7 per cent respectively when compared to control treatment without solarization. 相似文献
2.
Soil Carbon, Nitrogen and Phosphorus Dynamics as Affected by Solarization Alone or Combined with Organic Amendment 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Antonio Gelsomino Luigi Badalucco Loretta Landi Giovanni Cacco 《Plant and Soil》2006,279(1-2):307-325
Soil solarization, alone or combined with organic amendment, is an increasingly attractive approach for managing soil-borne
plant pathogens in agricultural soils. Even though it consists in a relatively mild heating treatment, the increased soil
temperature may strongly affect soil microbial processes and nutrients dynamics. This study aimed to investigate the impact
of solarization, either with or without addition of farmyard manure, in soil dynamics of various C, N and P pools. Changes
in total C, N and P contents and in some functionally-related labile pools (soil microbial biomass C and N, K2SO4-extractable C and N, basal respiration, KCl-exchangeable ammonium and nitrate, and water-soluble P) were followed across
a 72-day field soil solarization experiment carried out during a summer period on a clay loam soil in Southern Italy. Soil
physico-chemical properties (temperature, moisture content and pH) were also monitored. The average soil temperature at 8-cm
depth in solarized soils approached 55 °C as compared to 35 °C found in nonsolarized soil. Two-way ANOVA (solarization×organic
amendment) showed that both factors significantly affected most of the above variables, being the highest influence exerted
by the organic amendment. With no manure addition, solarization did not significantly affect soil total C, N and P pools.
Whereas soil pH, microbial biomass and, at a greater extent, K2SO4-extractable N and KCl-exchangeable ammonium were greatly affected. An increased release of water-soluble P was also found
in solarized soils. Yet, solarization altered the quality of soluble organic residues released in soil as it lowered the C-to-N
ratio of both soil microbial biomass and K2SO4-extractable organic substrates. Additionally, in solarized soils the metabolic quotient (qCO2) significantly increased while the microbial biomass C-to-total organic C ratio (microbial quotient) decreased over the whole
time course. We argued that soil solarization promoted the mineralization of readily decomposable pools of the native soil
organic matter (e.g. the microbial biomass) thus rendering larger, at least over a short-term, the available fraction of some
soil mineral nutrients, namely N and P forms. However, over a longer prospective solarization may lead to an over-exploitation
of labile organic resources in agricultural soils. Manure addition greatly increased the levels of both total and labile C,
N and P pools. Thus, addition of organic amendments could represent an important strategy to protect agricultural lands from
excessive soil resources exploitation and to maintain soil fertility while enhancing pest control. 相似文献
3.
Macrophomina phaseolina (Tassi) Goid. causes seedling blight, charcoal rot, leaf blight, stem and pod rot on over 500 plant species in different parts of the world. The pathogen survives as sclerotia formed in host tissues which are released into the soil as tissue decay. Low soil moisture is considered the more important predisposing factor for M. phaseolina-induced diseases than high temperature. The intensity of the disease on a crop is related to the population of viable sclerotia in the soil and abiotic factors. The influence of various management strategies in reducing the number of viable propagules of the pathogen in the soil has been studied in order to minimize the impact of the disease. Any management approach that reduces inoculum density in the soil may reduce disease incidence on the host. However, to reduce inoculum density, quantitative determination of viable propagules from soil is necessary in order to understand the effect of management strategies on the population dynamics of this pathogen. Considerable work has been done on organic amendments, changing crop sequences with tolerant crops, fumigants, herbicides and tillage in managing M. phaseolina populations in the soil and the resulting disease. Solarization has been used in controlling M. phaseolina in different countries where this pathogen is causing disease on economically valuable crops. However, this method of soil disinfestation was effective in eliminating viable populations at the top soil layer although by combining other approaches its effectiveness was improved at lower soil depth. Use of biological control agents with or without organic amendments or after solarization has emerged to be a practical management approach in the control of M. phaseolina. In this paper, an attempt has been made to review those research findings where the influence of various management approaches on survival of M. phaseolina mainly sclerotia have been investigated. 相似文献
4.
5.
Solarization of soil, (potting mix = coarse sand:Eucalyptus marginata fines = 1∶1) infested with 3 fungi pathogenic to gerbera (Phytophthora cryptogea, Fusarium oxysporum andRhizoctonia solani), for 3 to 4 weeks within transparent polyethylene bags controlled root rot of gerbera. Solarization for 2 weeks however,
was less effective. All plants grown in the infested potting mix which had been kept in shade for 2, 3 or 4 weeks were severely
attacked.
Solarization of soil within plastic bags for 4 weeks also increased availability of nutrients such as NH4
+-N, PO4
− and K+ in comparison to bagged soil kept in the shade for the same period. 相似文献
6.
7.
Soil solarization in combination with introduction of biocontrol agents (BCA) was evaluated as a potential disease management
strategy for tomato damping-off caused by Pythium spp. A rifampicin resistant Pseudomonas fluorescens strain (PfT-8) and a carbendazim resistant Trichoderma harzianum strain (ThM-1) were introduced into soil following solarization. Tomato seeds were planted into treated field plots. The
influence of soil solarization and application of biocontrol agents on damping-off incidence, plant biomass, rhizosphere population
of introduced antagonists, and native Pythium spp. was assessed by two consecutive field trials. Damping-off incidence was significantly reduced in solarized plots compared
to control. Soil inoculation of biocontrol agents into solarized plots resulted in the highest suppression of damping-off
incidence (PfT-8 up to 92%; ThM-1 up to 83%), and increase in plant biomass (PfT-8 up to 66%; ThM-1 up to 48%) when compared
to un-solarized control plots. Rhizosphere population of introduced biocontrol agents gradually increased (PfT-8 up to 102%
and ThM-1 up to 84%) in solarized soils when compared to unsolarized control. The population of Pythium spp in rhizosphere soil was reduced up to 55% in solarized plots; whereas, application of BCA to solarized soils reduced
the rhizosphere population of Pythium spp. by 86 and 82% in P. fluorescens and T. harzianum applied plots respectively. 相似文献
8.
Integration of soil solarization with chemical, biological and cultural control for the management of soilborne diseases of vegetables 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
C. Stevens V. A. Khan R. Rodriguez-Kabana L. D. Ploper P. A. Backman D. J. Collins J. E. Brown M. A. Wilson E. C. K. Igwegbe 《Plant and Soil》2003,253(2):493-506
The long-term effectiveness of soil solarization integrated with (integration of pest management [IPM]) a biological control agent (Trichoderma virens), chemical fungicide (pentachloronitrobenzene [PCNB]), organic amendment (chicken litter) or physical method (black agriplastic mulch) to reduce southern blight (Sclerotium rolfsii) and southern root-knot diseases (Meloidogyne incognita) were evaluated on vegetable production. Results showed that the long-term effectiveness of IPM plus soil solarization reduced soilborne diseases of vegetables more than two years following the termination of solarization. These disease management strategies in 1991 and 1992, following soil solarization in 1990, reduced the numbers of sclerotia in the soil, and the number of plants killed by southern blight and root-knot of tomatoes, compared to nonsolarized bare soil treatment. The integration of a reduced dosage level of PCNB or T. virens in field plots, reduced southern blight of tomatoes by 100% and 71%, respectively, in solarized soil, compared to nonsolarized bare soil two years following soil solarization. PCNB effectively controlled southern blight in nonsolarized bare soil both years. All solarized treatments, except PCNB plus solarized soil increased tomato yields compared to nonsolarized bare soil plots. In the second study (1992) following soil solarization in 1991, the effectiveness of solarized bare soil, and nonsolarized bare soil mulched with black agriplastic film, with or without Reemay spunbounded polyester row cover, were effective in reducing root-knot of tomatoes as indicated by the root-knot gall index. Following a one year fallow period in 1994 three years following soil solarization, the root-knot gall index for severity of tomato roots grown in solarized bare soil, nonsolarized bare soil, black agriplastic mulched bare nonsolarized soil and black agriplastic mulched solarized bare soil, were 1.0, 3.0, 3.0 and 2.0, respectively, on a 0–5 scale, where 0=0% and 5=100% root-knot galled. In the third study 1992 and 1993, different dosage levels of chicken litter were used to amend soil artificially infested with sclerotia of S. rolfsii at different depths following solarization, decreased the number of viable sclerotia by 85–100%. All solarized treatments and nonsolarized bare soil amended with 18.8 MT/ha of chicken litter, were effective in controlling southern root-knot damage, and postharvest storage root rots of sweetpotato storage roots (Fusarium root rot [Fusarium solani] and Java black rot [Diplodia tubericola]). Our study showed that all soil solarization treatments, and soils amended with chicken litter, stimulated a shift in the soil microbial population dynamics. Rhizobacteria of Bacillus spp. and fluorescent pseudomonads increased significantly in the rhizosphere, rhizoplane, and interior root tissues of tomatoes and sweetpoatoes, grown in solarized soil compared to nonsolarized soil. These microorganisms may have contributed to the increased growth response of vegetables and some were probably suppressive to soilborne diseases 相似文献
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10.
Field trials were performed in Florida to evaluate tomato and pepper transplants amended with formulations of several plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) in a production system that included soil solarization. Transplants grown in five different formulations of PGPR were planted into plots treated by soil solarization, MeBr fumigation, or untreated soil. Treatments were assessed for incidence of several naturally occurring tomato and pepper pathogens including root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne incognita) and species of Pythium, Phytophthora, and Fusarium. Highly significant increases in tomato and pepper transplant growth occurred in response to most formulations of PGPR tested. Transplant vigor and survival in the field were improved by PGPR treatments in both tomato and pepper. Diseases of tomato caused by root-knot nematodes, Fusarium, Phytophthora, and Pythium were not affected by PGPR treatments. PGPR formulation LS261 reduced numbers of root-knot nematode galls on pepper while pepper root condition was improved with formulations LS213, LS256 and LS261. Individual PGPR strains affected the number of Pythium colonies isolated from pepper roots, but did not affect isolation of Pythium from tomato roots. Greater numbers of colonies of Pythium were isolated from pepper roots in the MeBr treatment and fewest in the solarization treatment. Numbers of colony forming units of Fusarium were significantly higher in the untreated soil than in MeBr fumigated or solarized soil with no effect of PGPR on isolation of Fusarium from either crop. Incidence of wilt symptoms on tomato was significantly lower in MeBr treated plots and highest in the untreated plots. Yield of extra large tomato fruit and total yield increased with PGPR formulation LS256. Yield of pepper was increased with formulations LS255 and LS256. Solarization combined with LS256 on pepper produced yields comparable to MeBr. 相似文献