U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Horticulture Research Laboratory, Fort Pierce, FL 34945, USA.
Phytopathology. 2012 Jun;102(6):597-608. doi: 10.1094/PHYTO-08-11-0219.
Development of sustainable food systems is contingent upon the adoption of land management practices that can mitigate damage from soilborne pests. Five diverse land management practices were studied for their impacts on Fusarium wilt (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici), galling of roots by Meloidogyne spp. and marketable yield of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) and to identify associations between the severity of pest damage and the corresponding soil microbial community structure. The incidence of Fusarium wilt was >14% when tomato was cultivated following 3 to 4 years of an undisturbed weed fallow or continuous tillage disk fallow rotation and was >4% after 3 to 4 years of bahiagrass (Paspalum notatum) rotation or organic production practices that included soil amendments and cover crops. The incidence of Fusarium wilt under conventional tomato production with soil fumigation varied from 2% in 2003 to 15% in 2004. Repeated tomato cultivation increased Fusarium wilt by 20% or more except when tomato was grown using organic practices, where disease remained less than 3%. The percent of tomato roots with galls from Meloidogyne spp. ranged from 18 to 82% in soil previously subjected to a weed fallow rotation and 7 to 15% in soil managed previously as a bahiagrass pasture. Repeated tomato cultivation increased the severity of root galling in plots previously subjected to a conventional or disk fallow rotation but not in plots managed using organic practices, where the percentage of tomato roots with galls remained below 1%. Marketable yield of tomato exceeded 35 Mg ha(-1) following all land management strategies except the strip-tillage/bahiagrass program. Marketable yield declined by 11, 14, and 19% when tomato was grown in consecutive years following a bahiagrass, weed fallow, and disk rotation. The composition of fungal internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) and bacterial 16S rDNA amplicons isolated from soil fungal and bacterial communities corresponded with observed differences in the incidence of Fusarium wilt and severity of root galling from Meloidogyne spp. and provided evidence of an association between the effect of land management practices on soil microbial community structure, severity of root galling from Meloidogyne spp., and the incidence of Fusarium wilt.
可持续粮食系统的发展取决于采用能够减轻土传病虫害损害的土地管理措施。研究了五种不同的土地管理措施对番茄枯萎病(Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici)、根结线虫(Meloidogyne spp.)引起的根瘤和番茄(Solanum lycopersicum)商品产量的影响,并确定了害虫损害严重程度与相应土壤微生物群落结构之间的关系。番茄连续种植 3-4 年后,不进行杂草休耕或连续旋耕圆盘休耕,番茄枯萎病发病率>14%,种植 3-4 年后,种植百喜草(Paspalum notatum)或包括土壤改良剂和覆盖作物在内的有机生产方式,发病率>4%。在常规番茄生产中进行土壤熏蒸时,番茄枯萎病的发病率在 2003 年为 2%,在 2004 年为 15%。除了使用有机生产方式种植番茄时,病情低于 3%外,重复种植番茄可使番茄枯萎病增加 20%或更多。百喜草草之前种植过的土壤中,番茄根结线虫引起的番茄根瘤比例从 18%到 82%不等,而之前管理为百喜草草牧场的土壤中,根瘤比例为 7%到 15%。在常规或圆盘休耕轮作之前的土壤中,重复种植番茄会增加根结线虫的严重程度,但在使用有机生产方式管理的土壤中,番茄根瘤的比例仍低于 1%。除了条耕/百喜草方案外,所有土地管理策略的番茄商品产量都超过了 35 Mg ha(-1)。番茄连续种植 3 年后,百喜草、杂草休耕和圆盘轮作的商品产量分别下降了 11%、14%和 19%。从土壤真菌和细菌群落中分离出的真菌内转录间隔区 1(ITS1)和细菌 16S rDNA 扩增子的组成与观察到的番茄枯萎病发病率和根结线虫引起的根瘤严重程度的差异相对应,并提供了证据表明土地管理措施对土壤微生物群落结构、根结线虫引起的根瘤严重程度和番茄枯萎病发病率的影响之间存在关联。