4.5 Review

The Use of Biochar for Plant Pathogen Control

Journal

PHYTOPATHOLOGY
Volume 111, Issue 9, Pages 1490-1499

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-06-20-0248-RVW

Keywords

bacterial pathogens; biochar; disease control and pest management; disease resistance; fungal pathogens; induced resistance; microbial ecology; nematodes; oomycetes; soil amendment

Categories

Funding

  1. Spanish Government [AGL201675287-R, PID2019-105924RB-I00, RED2018-102407-T]
  2. Junta de Castilla La Mancha [SBPLY/17/180501/000287]
  3. UCLM
  4. EU FEDER funds
  5. Fundacion Tatiana Perez de Guzman el Bueno

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Biochar, as a soil amendment, controls root or foliar fungal pathogens by modifying root exudates, soil properties, and nutrient availability to influence the growth of antagonist microorganisms. It induces systemic plant defenses, activates stress-hormone responses, and changes active oxygen species, showing coordinated hormonal signaling within the plant. Additionally, biochar promotes changes in soil microbiota influencing pathogen motility and colonization, as well as inducing plant systemic defenses, contributing to disease suppression.
To support the search for alternative, nonchemical plant disease control strategies, we present a review of the pathogen-suppressive effects of biochar, a product derived from agricultural and other organic wastes, used as a soil amendment. A wide range of biochar effects contribute to the control of root or foliar fungal pathogens through modification of root exudates. soil properties. and nutrient availability, which influence the growth of antagonist microorganisms. The induction of systemic plant defenses by biochar in the roots to reduce foliar pathogenic fungi, the activation of stress-hormone responses, as well as changes in active oxygen species are indicative of a coordinated hormonal signaling within the plant. Although scarce data are available for oomycetes and bacterial pathogens, reports indicate that biochar promotes changes in the soil microbiota influencing pathogen motility and colonization, and the induction of plant systemic defenses, both contributing to disease suppression. Biochar also suppresses nematode and insect pests. For plant-parasitic nematodes, the primary modes of action are changes in soil microbial community diversity, the release of nematicidal compounds, and the induction of plant defenses. Use of biochar-based soil amendments is a promising strategy compatible with a circular economy, based on zero waste, as part of integrated pathogen and pest management. Since biochars exert complex and distinct modes of action for the control of plant pathogens. its nature and application regimes should be designed for particular pathogens and its effects studied locally.

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