Characterising the effect of crop species and fertilisation treatment on root fungal communities

被引:0
|
作者
Liina Soonvald
Kaire Loit
Eve Runno-Paurson
Alar Astover
Leho Tedersoo
机构
[1] Estonian University of Life Sciences,Chair of Plant Health, Institute of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
[2] Estonian University of Life Sciences,Chair of Soil Science, Institute of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
[3] Estonian University of Life Sciences,Chair of Crop Science and Plant Biology, Institute of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
[4] University of Tartu,Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Information about the root mycobiome may improve the overall quality of the plants and contribute to a valuable strategy to enhance sustainable agriculture. Therefore, we assessed differences in fungal community diversity and composition in the roots of potato, wheat and barley grown under mineral nitrogen fertilisation at five rates, with and without farmyard manure amendment. The same factorial combination of treatments has been used since 1989. Species richness and diversity, as well as community composition, of different fungal guilds were characterised using Illumina MiSeq sequencing of the ITS2 region. Crop species was the main factor determining overall fungal richness and diversity, with wheat showing the highest, and potato the lowest, richness and diversity. Pathogen diversity indices were highest in wheat plots amended with farmyard manure, whereas the lowest values were observed for potato roots. Fertilisation treatments and the interaction between crop species and fertilisation had the strongest impact on arbuscular mycorrhiza and saprotroph diversity. Crop species also determined the composition of the overall fungal community and that of fungal guilds, whereas fertilisation treatment had only a minor effect. This study highlights crop species as the main driver in shaping root fungal diversity and composition under the same environmental conditions.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Characterising the effect of crop species and fertilisation treatment on root fungal communities
    Soonvald, Liina
    Loit, Kaire
    Runno-Paurson, Eve
    Astover, Alar
    Tedersoo, Leho
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [2] Discovering fungal communities in roots of Zoysia japonica and characterising novel species and their antifungal activities
    Liu, Haifeng
    Choi, Hyeongju
    Paul, Narayan Chandra
    Ariyawansa, Hiran A.
    Sang, Hyunkyu
    IMA FUNGUS, 2025, 16
  • [3] Maize fungal root pathogens as affected by fertilisation and rotation with legumes
    Nemadodzi, Edzisani A.
    Franke, Angelinus C.
    Mashingaidze, Nester
    Kotze, Elmarie
    Mavunganidze, Zira
    CROP PROTECTION, 2023, 165
  • [4] Plant Species Richness and the Root Economics Space Drive Soil Fungal Communities
    Hennecke, Justus
    Bassi, Leonardo
    Albracht, Cynthia
    Amyntas, Angelos
    Bergmann, Joana
    Eisenhauer, Nico
    Fox, Aaron
    Heimbold, Lea
    Heintz-Buschart, Anna
    Kuyper, Thomas W.
    Lange, Markus
    de Souza, Yuri Pinheiro Alves
    Rai, Akanksha
    Solbach, Marcel Dominik
    Mommer, Liesje
    Weigelt, Alexandra
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2025, 28 (01)
  • [5] Host species identity in annual Brassicaceae has a limited effect on the assembly of root-endophytic fungal communities
    Glynou, Kyriaki
    Thines, Marco
    Macia-Vicente, Jose G.
    PLANT ECOLOGY & DIVERSITY, 2018, 11 (5-6) : 569 - 580
  • [6] Nitrogen addition alters soil fungal communities, but root fungal communities are resistant to change
    Carrell, Alyssa A. A.
    Hicks, Brittany B. B.
    Sidelinger, Emilie
    Johnston, Eric R. R.
    Jawdy, Sara S. S.
    Clark, Miranda M. M.
    Klingeman, Dawn M. M.
    Cregger, Melissa A. A.
    FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2023, 13
  • [7] Hyperspectral crop reflectance data for characterising and estimating fungal disease severity in wheat
    Muhammed, HH
    BIOSYSTEMS ENGINEERING, 2005, 91 (01) : 9 - 20
  • [8] Are plant communities shaped by fungal root endophytes?
    Reininger, V.
    Gruenig, C. R.
    Sieber, T. N.
    PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2011, 101 (06) : S151 - S152
  • [9] Assessment of root-associated fungal communities colonizing two species of tropical grasses reveals incongruence to fungal communities of North American native grasses
    Herrera, Jose
    Poudel, Ravin
    Bokati, Deepak
    FUNGAL ECOLOGY, 2013, 6 (01) : 65 - 69
  • [10] Soil acid and alkaline phosphatase activities in regulation to crop species and fungal treatment
    Eichler, B
    Caus, M
    Schnug, E
    Köppen, D
    LANDBAUFORSCHUNG VOLKENRODE, 2004, 54 (01): : 1 - 5