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  2. Chemical fumigants control apple replant disease: Microbial community structure-mediated inhibition of Fusarium and degradation of phenolic acids

Chemical fumigants control apple replant disease: Microbial community structure-mediated inhibition of Fusarium and degradation of phenolic acids

  • J Hazard Mater. 2022 Oct 15;440:129786. doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.129786.
Weitao Jiang 1 Ran Chen 1 Lei Zhao 1 Lei Qin 1 Hai Fan 2 Xuesen Chen 1 Yanfang Wang 2 Chengmiao Yin 1 Zhiquan Mao 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Crop Biology College of Horticulture Science and Engineering Shandong Agricultural University Tai'an, Shandong 271018, PR China.
  • 2 College of Chemistry and Material Science Shandong Agricultural University Tai'an, Shandong 271018, PR China.
  • 3 State Key Laboratory of Crop Biology College of Horticulture Science and Engineering Shandong Agricultural University Tai'an, Shandong 271018, PR China. Electronic address: [email protected].
Abstract

Fusarium and phenolic acids in apple replant soil have deleterious effects on soil, which affects the growth of young replanted apple trees. Here, we studied the effects of different chemical fumigants (metham sodium, dazomet, calcium cyanamide, 1,3-dichloropropene, and methyl bromide) on Fusarium and phenolic acids in soil. The chemical fumigants disturbed the apple replant soil microbial community to different degrees in the order from highest to the lowest as methyl bromide > 1,3-dichloropropene > dazomet > metham sodium > calcium cyanamide. Compared with the control, the total numbers of Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU) were 104.63 % and 9.38 % lower in the methyl bromide and calcium cyanamide treatments, respectively while the average contents of Fusarium were 88.04 % and 59.18% lower in these treatments, respectively. Higher disturbance degrees resulted in a slower recovery rate of the soil microbial community, which facilitated the transformation of the soil into a disease-suppressing state. During the recovery process, the roots recruited Streptomyces OTU2796 and Bacillus OTU2243, which alleviated Fusarium-induced stress via the synthesis of polyketones and macrolides. The roots also recruited Sphingomonas OTU3488, OTU5572, and OTU8147, which alleviated phenolic acid-induced stress through the degradation of benzoate and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.

Keywords

Apple replant disease; Chemical fumigant; High-throughput sequencing; PICRUSt (2.2.0) functional prediction; Soil microorganism.

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