筛选真菌衍生生物除草剂在杂草管理中的潜力

Bhupendra Kuldeep, Dr Lumeshwari Sahu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

合成除草剂长期以来一直是现代农业的基石,可有效控制杂草,但往往要付出巨大的环境和健康代价。这些化学物质会在环境中持续存在,渗入地下水,危害包括人类在内的非目标生物。此外,合成除草剂的过度使用导致了抗除草剂杂草的发展,使杂草管理策略更加复杂。为了应对这些挑战,研究人员和农民们越来越多地将从真菌中提取的生物除草剂作为一种可持续的替代品。与合成除草剂不同,真菌生物除草剂利用真菌本身作为病原体或其代谢产物来破坏杂草的生长。这种方法有几个明显的优势:靶标特异性:真菌生物除草剂可以高度特异性地针对某些杂草种类,甚至是杂草生长的特定阶段。这种特异性减少了对非目标植物和生物的附带损害,因此特别适用于环境敏感地区,如有机农场、河岸地带和受保护的生态系统。环境友好:合成除草剂会在环境中持久存在,并在土壤和水体中积累,而真菌生物除草剂则不同,它们的持久性通常较低。它们降解速度更快,对非目标生物的影响通常很小,从而保护了生物多样性和生态系统健康。降低抗药性风险:合成除草剂经常会面临抗除草剂杂草的挑战,这些杂草会随着除草剂的不断广泛使用而产生抗药性。相比之下,真菌生物除草剂产生抗药性的风险较低。这是因为它们通常通过杂草体内的多种作用模式或生化途径发挥作用,使杂草更难产生抗药性机制。真菌生物除草剂研究正在积极探索和利用这些优势。科学家们正在筛选各种真菌物种,以确定能有效抑制杂草生长的强效病原体或代谢物。此外,生物技术和基因工程的进步使真菌菌株得到了增强,从而优化了其生物除草特性,同时确保了安全性和有效性。一个很有前景的例子是使用 Phomamacrostoma 和 Colletotrichum truncatum 等真菌病原体,这些病原体对多种杂草,包括绒毛草和猪笼草等常见的农用杂草具有很好的防效。这些真菌通过孢子附着、穿透植物组织和分泌植物毒性代谢物等机制感染杂草,从而抑制杂草生长。除了对杂草管理产生直接影响外,真菌生物除草剂还能减少对合成化学品的依赖,有助于可持续农业实践。真菌生物除草剂除了对杂草管理有直接影响外,还能减少对合成化学品的依赖,有助于可持续农业实践。它们符合害虫综合治理(IPM)原则,提供了一种生物防治方法,补充了文化和机械除草策略。此外,还需要解决制剂稳定性、成本效益和监管审批等挑战,以促进农民的广泛采用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Screening the Potential f Fungal Derived Bioherbicide in Weed Management
Synthetic herbicides have long been a cornerstone of modern agriculture, providing effective weed control but often at significant environmental and health costs. These chemicals can persist in the environment, leach into groundwater, and harm non-target organisms, including humans. Additionally, the overuse of synthetic herbicides has led to the development of herbicide-resistant weeds, further complicating weed management strategies. In response to these challenges, researchers and farmers alike are increasingly turning to bioherbicides derived from fungi as a sustainable alternative. Fungal bioherbicides harness the natural antagonistic properties of fungi to target weeds. Unlike synthetic herbicides, which are chemically synthesized and often broad-spectrum in action, fungal bioherbicides utilize either the fungi themselves as pathogens or their metabolites to disrupt weed growth. This approach offers several distinct advantages:Target Specificity: Fungal bioherbicides can be highly specific to certain weed species or even to specific stages of weed growth. This specificity reduces collateral damage to non-target plants and organisms, making them particularly suitable for environmentally sensitive areas such as organic farms, riparian zones, and protected ecosystems. Environmental Friendliness: Unlike synthetic herbicides that can persist in the environment and accumulate in soil and water bodies, fungal bioherbicides generally have lower persistence. They degrade more rapidly and often have minimal impact on non-target organisms, thereby preserving biodiversity and ecosystem health. Reduced Risk of Resistance: Synthetic herbicides often face the challenge of herbicide-resistant weeds, which evolve due to continuous and widespread use. Fungal bioherbicides, by contrast, pose a lower risk of resistance development. This is because they typically act through multiple modes of action or biochemical pathways within the weed, making it harder for weeds to develop resistance mechanisms. Research into fungal-derived bioherbicides is actively exploring and harnessing these advantages. Scientists are screening diverse fungal species to identify potent pathogens or metabolites that effectively inhibit weed growth. Moreover, advances in biotechnology and genetic engineering allow for the enhancement of fungal strains to optimize their bioherbicidal properties while ensuring safety and efficacy. One promising example is the use of fungal pathogens like Phomamacrostoma and Colletotrichum truncatum, which have demonstrated efficacy against various weed species including common agricultural weeds like velvetleaf and pigweed. These fungi infect weeds through mechanisms such as spore attachment, penetration of plant tissues, and secretion of phytotoxic metabolites that inhibit weed growth. In addition to their direct impact on weed management, fungal bioherbicides contribute to sustainable agricultural practices by reducing reliance on synthetic chemicals. They align with principles of integrated pest management (IPM) by offering a biological control method that complements cultural and mechanical weed control strategies. Moving forward, continued research and development efforts are essential to refine fungal bioherbicides, optimize application techniques, and expand their practical use in diverse agricultural settings. Challenges such as formulation stability, cost-effectiveness, and regulatory approvals also need to be addressed to facilitate widespread adoption by farmers.
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