合成群落改善作物生产性能,改变根际微生物群落

Simranjit Kaur, Eleonora Egidi, Zhiguang Qiu, Catriona A. Macdonald, Jay Prakash Verma, Pankaj Trivedi, Juntao Wang, Hongwei Liu, Brajesh K. Singh
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引用次数: 11

摘要

利用植物促生长微生物的合成群落(SynCom)被认为是提高作物适应性和生产力的一种很有前途的方法。然而,支持提高植物性能的生物机制和合成群落的传递模式的影响尚不清楚。这些关键的知识差距限制了SynCom的田间效率,从而限制了农业社区的大规模采用。材料,方法构建4种PGP微生物的SynCom,分别施用于5个不同品种的棉花(棉)上(T1处理,在播种时施用)和土壤(T2处理,在真叶期施用)。评估了SynCom对植物生长、根际微生物群和土壤养分有效性的影响,以及植物品种和施用方式对其的影响。结果结果表明,施用SynCom对植物整体适宜度有显著的正向影响,提高了种子发芽率(14.3%)、株高(7.4%)和地上部生物量(5.4%)。在T1处理下,花数显著增加(10.4%),产量显著增加(8.5%)。土壤硝态氮有效性在T1和T2处理下分别提高了28%和55%。结果进一步表明,SynCom的应用引发了根际放线菌门、厚壁菌门和蓝藻门细菌门成员的富集。真菌群落也发生了变化,在SynCom处理下壶菌门和担子菌门真菌的相对丰度显著增加。结构方程模型表明,SynCom直接提高作物产量,但也通过影响细菌α多样性间接提高作物产量。综上所述,本研究提供了SynCom应用可以改变根际微生物群落,改善土壤肥力、植物生长和作物生产力的机制证据,表明其使用可以促进农业生产力的可持续提高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Synthetic community improves crop performance and alters rhizosphere microbial communities

Synthetic community improves crop performance and alters rhizosphere microbial communities

Introduction

Harnessing synthetic communities (SynCom) of plant growth-promoting (PGP) microorganisms is considered a promising approach to improve crop fitness and productivity. However, biotic mechanisms that underpin improved plant performance and the effects of delivery mode of synthetic community are poorly understood. These are critical knowledge gaps that constrain field efficacy of SynCom and hence large-scale adoption by the farming community.

Material & Methods

In this study, a SynCom of four PGP microbial species was constructed and applied to either as seed dressing (treatment T1, applied at the time of sowing) or to soil (treatment T2, applied in soil at true leaf stage) across five different cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) cultivars. The impact of SynCom on plant growth, rhizosphere microbiome and soil nutrient availability, and how this was modified by plant variety and mode of applications, was assessed.

Results

Results showed that the seed application of SynCom had the strongest positive impact on overall plant fitness, resulting in higher germination (14.3%), increased plant height (7.4%) and shoot biomass (5.4%). A significant increase in the number of flowers (10.4%) and yield (8.5%) was also observed in T1. The soil nitrate availability was enhanced by 28% and 55% under T1 and T2, respectively. Results further suggested that SynCom applications triggered enrichment of members from bacterial phyla Actinobacteria, Firmicutes and Cyanobacteria in the rhizosphere. A shift in fungal communities was also observed, with a significant increase in the relative abundance of fungi from phyla Chytridiomycota and Basidiomycota in SynCom treatments. A structural equation model suggested that SynCom directly increased crop productivity but also indirectly via impacting the alpha diversity of bacteria.

Conclusion

Overall, this study provides mechanistic evidence that SynCom applications can shift rhizosphere microbial communities and improve soil fertility, plant growth, and crop productivity, suggesting that their use could contribute toward sustainable increase in farm productivity.

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