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Biodiversity of the beneficial soil-borne fungi steered by *Trichoderma*-amended biofertilizers stimulates plant production

Agriculture

Biodiversity of the beneficial soil-borne fungi steered by *Trichoderma*-amended biofertilizers stimulates plant production

Y. Wang, Z. Liu, et al.

This groundbreaking study by Yan Wang, Zhengyang Liu, Xinyi Hao, Ziqi Wang, Zhe Wang, Shanshan Liu, Chengyuan Tao, Dongsheng Wang, Bei Wang, Zongzhuan Shen, Qirong Shen, and Rong Li unveils how *Trichoderma guizhouense*-infused bio-organic fertilizers enhance cabbage growth by enriching the soil's fungal community. This research highlights the dual benefits of bio-organic fertilizers for a thriving microbiome and increased crop yield.... show more
Abstract
The soil microbiota is critical to plant performance. Improving the ability of plant-associated soil probiotics is thus essential for establishing dependable and sustainable crop yields. Although fertilizer applications may provide an effective way of steering soil microbes, it is still unknown how the positive effects of soil-borne probiotics can be maximized and how their effects are mediated. This work aims to seek the ecological mechanisms involved in cabbage growth using bio-organic fertilizers. We conducted a long-term field experiment in which we amended soil with non-sterilized organic or sterilized organic fertilizer either containing Trichoderma guizhouense NJAU4742 or lacking this inoculum and tracked cabbage plant growth and the soil fungal community. Trichoderma-amended bio-organic fertilizers significantly increased cabbage plant biomass and this effect was attributed to changes in the resident fungal community composition, including an increase in the relative abundance and number of indigenous soil growth-promoting fungal taxa. We specifically highlight the fundamental role of the biodiversity and population density of these plant-beneficial fungal taxa in improving plant growth. Together, our results suggest that the beneficial effects of bio-organic fertilizer seem to be a combination of the biological inoculum within the organic amendment as well as the indirect promotion through effects on the diversity and composition of the soil resident plant-beneficial fungal microbiome.
Publisher
npj Biofilms and Microbiomes
Published On
Jul 05, 2023
Authors
Yan Wang, Zhengyang Liu, Xinyi Hao, Ziqi Wang, Zhe Wang, Shanshan Liu, Chengyuan Tao, Dongsheng Wang, Bei Wang, Zongzhuan Shen, Qirong Shen, Rong Li
Tags
cabbage growth
bio-organic fertilizers
Trichoderma guizhouense
fungal community
plant growth
soil microbiome
biodiversity
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