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Trichoderma-amended biofertilizer stimulates soil resident Aspergillus population for joint plant growth promotion

Agriculture

Trichoderma-amended biofertilizer stimulates soil resident Aspergillus population for joint plant growth promotion

X. Hang, L. Meng, et al.

Discover how Trichoderma bio-organic fertilizer can revolutionize sustainable agriculture by enhancing soil microbial communities and boosting crop yields! This groundbreaking research, conducted by Xinnan Hang and colleagues from Nanjing Agricultural University, reveals the intricate partnerships between beneficial fungi that promote plant growth.... show more
Abstract
Application of plant growth-promoting microbes (PGPMs) can contribute to sustainable agricultural ecosystems. From a three-year field experiment, we already found that the addition of Trichoderma bio-organic fertilizer (BF) significantly improved crop growth and yield compared to the application of organic fertilizer (OF). Here, we tracked the responses of soil bacterial and fungal communities to these treatments to find the key soil microbial taxa that contribute to the crop yield enhancement. We also examined if bacterial and fungal suspensions from resulting soils could improve plant growth upon inoculation into sterilized soil. Lastly, we isolated a number of fungal strains related to populations affected by treatments to examine their role in plant growth promotion. Results showed that consecutive application of BF impacted soil fungal communities, and the biological nature of plant growth promotion was confirmed via pot experiments using γ-sterilized versus none-sterilized soils collected from the field. Soil slurry experiments suggested that fungal, but not bacterial communities, played an important role in plant growth promotion, consistent with the results of our field experimental data. Fungal community analysis of both field and slurry experimental soils revealed increases in specific resident Aspergillus spp. Interestingly, Aspergillus tamarii showed no plant growth promotion by itself, but strongly increased the growth promotion activity of the Trichoderma amendment strain upon their co-inoculation. The effectiveness of the fungal amendment appears to stem not only from its own action, but also from synergetic interactions with resident fungal populations activated upon biofertilizer application.
Publisher
npj Biofilms and Microbiomes
Published On
Jul 12, 2022
Authors
Xinnan Hang, Lingxue Meng, Yannan Ou, Cheng Shao, Wu Xiong, Nan Zhang, Hongjun Liu, Rong Li, Qirong Shen, George A. Kowalchuk
Tags
plant growth-promoting microbes
Trichoderma
bio-organic fertilizer
soil microbial communities
crop yield
Aspergillus
synergistic interactions
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