4.6 Article

The effects and interrelationships of intercropping on Cotton Verticillium wilt and soil microbial communities

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BMC MICROBIOLOGY
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

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BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12866-023-02780-6

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Interplanting; Cotton Verticillium wilt; Soil; Microbial community structure

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This study explored the relationship between intercropping patterns (cotton-onion, cotton-garlic, cotton-wheat and cotton monoculture) and the soil microbial community structure in the context of Cotton Verticillium wilt. The results showed that intercropping with cotton-garlic and cotton-onion significantly reduced the incidence of the disease. The abundance of Chaetomium and Penicillium was found to be associated with disease resistance.
BackgroundCotton Verticillium wilt, causing by Verticillium dahliae, has seriously affected the yield and quality of cotton. The incidence of Verticillium wilt in cotton fields has been on the rise for many years, especially after straw has been returned to the fields. Intercropping can reduce the incidence of soil borne diseases and is often used to control crop diseases, but the relationship between the effects of intercropping on microbial communities and the occurrence of plant diseases is unclear. This research explored the relationship between soil microbial community structure and Cotton Verticillium wilt in interplanting of cotton-onion, cotton-garlic, cotton-wheat and cotton monocultures. Amplicon sequencing applied to the profile of bacterial and fungal communities.ResultsThe results showed that the disease index of Cotton Verticillium wilt was significantly reduced after intercropping with cotton-garlic and cotton-onion. Chao1 and Sobs indices were not significantly different in the rhizosphere soil and pre-plant soils of the four planting patterns, but the pre-plant fungal shannon index was significantly lower in the cotton-onion intercropping plot than in the other three plots. PCoA analysis showed that the soil microbial communities changed to a certain extent after intercropping, with large differences in the microbial communities under different cropping patterns. The abundance of Chaetomium was highest in the cotton-garlic intercropping before planting; the abundance of Penicillium was significantly higher in the cotton-wheat intercropping than in the other three systems.ConclusionCotton-garlic and cotton-onion interplanting can control Cotton Verticillium wilt by affecting the soil microbial community. Fungi of the genera Chaetomium and Penicillium may be associated with plant disease resistance.

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