Disease-Suppressive Soils-Beyond Food Production: a Critical Review.

IF 3.9 3区 农林科学 Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-03-12 DOI:10.1007/s42729-021-00451-x
Somasundaram Jayaraman, A K Naorem, Rattan Lal, Ram C Dalal, N K Sinha, A K Patra, S K Chaudhari
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引用次数: 52

Abstract

In the pursuit of higher food production and economic growth and increasing population, we have often jeopardized natural resources such as soil, water, vegetation, and biodiversity at an alarming rate. In this process, wider adoption of intensive farming practices, namely changes in land use, imbalanced fertilizer application, minimum addition of organic residue/manure, and non-adoption of site-specific conservation measures, has led to declining in soil health and land degradation in an irreversible manner. In addition, increasing use of pesticides, coupled with soil and water pollution, has led the researchers to search for an environmental-friendly and cost-effective alternatives to controlling soil-borne diseases that are difficult to control, and which significantly limit agricultural productivity. Since the 1960s, disease-suppressive soils (DSS) have been identified and studied around the world. Soil disease suppression is the reduction in the incidence of soil-borne diseases even in the presence of a host plant and inoculum in the soil. The disease-suppressive capacity is mainly attributed to diverse microbial communities present in the soil that could act against soil-borne pathogens in multifaceted ways. The beneficial microorganisms employ some specific functions such as antibiosis, parasitism, competition for resources, and predation. However, there has been increasing evidence on the role of soil abiotic factors that largely influence the disease suppression. The intricate interactions of the soil, plant, and environmental components in a disease triangle make this process complex yet crucial to study to reduce disease incidence. Increasing resistance of the pathogen to presently available chemicals has led to the shift from culturable microbes to unexplored and unculturable microbes. Agricultural management practices such as tillage, fertilization, manures, irrigation, and amendment applications significantly alter the soil physicochemical environment and influence the growth and behaviour of antagonistic microbes. Plant factors such as age, type of crop, and root behaviour of the plant could stimulate or limit the diversity and structure of soil microorganisms in the rhizosphere. Further, identification and in-depth of disease-suppressive soils could lead to the discovery of more beneficial microorganisms with novel anti-microbial and plant promoting traits. To date, several microbial species have been isolated and proposed as key contributors in disease suppression, but the complexities as well as the mechanisms of the microbial and abiotic interactions remain elusive for most of the disease-suppressive soils. Thus, this review critically explores disease-suppressive attributes in soils, mechanisms involved, and biotic and abiotic factors affecting DSS and also briefly reviewing soil microbiome for anti-microbial drugs, in fact, a consequence of DSS phenomenon.

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抗病土壤——超越粮食生产:一项重要综述。
在追求更高的粮食产量和经济增长以及不断增加的人口的过程中,我们经常以惊人的速度破坏土壤、水、植被和生物多样性等自然资源。在这一过程中,更广泛地采用集约化耕作方式,即改变土地利用、不平衡施肥、最低限度地添加有机残留物/粪肥以及不采取特定地点的保护措施,导致土壤健康下降和土地退化以不可逆转的方式发生。此外,越来越多地使用农药,加上土壤和水污染,导致研究人员寻找一种环境友好和具有成本效益的替代方法来控制难以控制的土壤传播疾病,这些疾病严重限制了农业生产力。自20世纪60年代以来,疾病抑制土壤(DSS)在世界范围内得到了确认和研究。土壤疾病抑制是指即使在土壤中存在寄主植物和接种物的情况下,也能减少土传疾病的发病率。这种疾病抑制能力主要归因于土壤中存在的多种微生物群落,它们可以以多方面的方式对抗土壤传播的病原体。有益微生物具有抗菌、寄生、资源竞争和捕食等特定功能。然而,越来越多的证据表明,土壤非生物因子在很大程度上影响了病害的抑制。土壤、植物和环境因素在疾病三角中的复杂相互作用使这一过程变得复杂,但对减少疾病发病率的研究至关重要。病原体对目前可用的化学物质的抵抗力增加,导致了从可培养微生物到未开发和不可培养微生物的转变。农业管理实践,如耕作、施肥、施肥、灌溉和改良剂的应用,显著地改变了土壤的物理化学环境,并影响了拮抗微生物的生长和行为。年龄、作物类型和根系行为等植物因素可以刺激或限制根际土壤微生物的多样性和结构。此外,对抗病土壤的鉴定和深入研究可以发现更多具有新型抑菌和促生特性的有益微生物。迄今为止,已经分离出几种微生物物种,并提出它们是疾病抑制的关键贡献者,但大多数疾病抑制土壤的微生物和非生物相互作用的复杂性及其机制仍然难以捉摸。因此,这篇综述批判性地探讨了土壤中的疾病抑制属性,所涉及的机制,以及影响DSS的生物和非生物因素,并简要回顾了土壤微生物组的抗微生物药物,实际上是DSS现象的结果。
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition is an international, peer reviewed journal devoted to publishing original research findings in the areas of soil science, plant nutrition, agriculture and environmental science. Soil sciences submissions may cover physics, chemistry, biology, microbiology, mineralogy, ecology, pedology, soil classification and amelioration. Plant nutrition and agriculture submissions may include plant production, physiology and metabolism of plants, plant ecology, diversity and sustainability of agricultural systems, organic and inorganic fertilization in relation to their impact on yields, quality of plants and ecological systems, and agroecosystems studies. Submissions covering soil degradation, environmental pollution, nature conservation, and environmental protection are also welcome. The journal considers for publication original research articles, technical notes, short communication, and reviews (both voluntary and by invitation), and letters to the editor.
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