4.7 Review

Soil and plant health in relation to dynamic sustainment of Eh and pH homeostasis: A review

Journal

PLANT AND SOIL
Volume 466, Issue 1-2, Pages 391-447

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11104-021-05047-z

Keywords

Redox potential; pH; Energy allocation; Growth-defense; One health; Soil suppressiveness

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Plants perform within a specific Eh-pH spectrum and rely on various processes to maintain homeostasis, which is central to their defense mechanism. The Eh-pH homeostasis model proposed in this study could serve as a powerful tool to understand and unify the complex interactions between genes, environment, management, pests, and pathogens, ultimately contributing to soil and plant health. By analyzing plant-invertebrate pests and plant-pathogen interactions under an Eh-pH perspective, the study sheds light on the importance of Eh-pH homeostasis in understanding plant health.
Background Plants perform in a specific Eh-pH spectrum and they rely on various processes to ensure their homeostasis, which plays a central role in their defense. The effects of multiple stresses, all translated into oxidative stress into the plant, and the capacity of the latter to respond to these stresses results in specific Eh-pH states in plants. Scope We reviewed plant-invertebrate pests and plant-pathogens interactions under a Eh-pH homeostasis perspective by extensively analyzing the literature, which converges and supports a set of hypotheses. We report examples showing how the development and attacks of pests are correlated to spatio-temporal variations of Eh-pH in plants. We provide evidence-based discussion on how Eh-pH homeostasis can open a new perspective on plant health, and help unravel and disentangle the many Genotype x Environment x Management x Pest and Pathogen interactions. We propose an original perspective on energy allocation and growth-defense tradeoff by plants based on the Eh-pH homeostasis model. Finally, we show how Eh-pH conditions in the rhizosphere are the results of multiple interactions between the root system and microorganisms. Based on this, we hypothesize that soil suppressiveness is derived from soil structure leading to diverse Eh-pH niches that harbor a diversity of microorganisms. Conclusions The Eh-pH homeostasis model proposed herein is central to soil and plant health. An Eh-pH perspective could become a very powerful tool to develop a one health approach unifying a large range of bio-physical processes in a very coherent and consistent manner.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available