Response of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) to combined application of organic compost along with plant growth promoting Aspergillus fungi
-
Published:2023-05-26
Issue:02
Volume:4
Page:545-552
-
ISSN:2708-3004
-
Container-title:Journal of Applied Research in Plant Sciences
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:joarps
Author:
Asghar Waleed,Asghar Naveed,Iftikhar Farhan,Mahmood Ahmad,Latif Abdul,Nawab Javed,Imran Muhammad,Khan Madeeha,Arsalan Muhammad,Ehsan Muhammad,Ullah Rehmat,Bilal Muhammad
Abstract
Bio-organic fertilizers can improve soil health and maintain microbial activity. The application of Aspergillus spp. can degrade organic matter, promote plant growth, and improve soil health by accelerating soil nutrients and biological activity. Previously, Aspergillus spp. has shown potential in phosphate solubilization and siderophore production. Still, a study gap remains, and focus has been placed on clarifying the impact of Aspergillus sp. AS2022 on soil microbial biomass and soil nutrient acceleration. For this purpose, a pot experiment was established with four different treatments: cow compost (CC), cow compost + AS2022 (CA), AS2022 (AS) strain only and control-only soil (CK). The amount of cow compost used was 180 mg N kg-1. Results revealed that inoculation of AS2022 with cow compost stimulated nitrogen mineralization and enhanced available nitrogen and accelerated the soil enzyme activities, which proposed that it could contribute to wheat crop production through the initial and later phases of plant growth. Although a single application of AS2022 enhances plant growth compared to the control, it might be the release of secondary metabolites. However, our short-term findings showed that the combined application of beneficial fungal strain AS2022 along cow compost was suitable culture for wheat crop production and improvement of soil quality through organic matter degradation and accelerating soil nutrients.
Publisher
Journal of Applied Research in Plant Sciences (JOARPS)
Subject
Ocean Engineering
Reference34 articles.
1. Ahmed, M., Rauf, M., Mukhtar, Z., & Saeed, N. A. (2017). Excessive use of nitrogenous fertilizers: an unawareness causing serious threats to environment and human health. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 24(35), 26983-26987. 2. Ahmed, S., Matiullah, K., Taqi, R., Ahmad, R., & Iqbal, J. (2022). Integrated use of bio-organic and chemical fertilizer to enhance yield and nutrients content of tomato. Eurasian Journal of Soil Science, 11(2), 126-132. 3. Appelhof, M., & Olszewski, J. (2017). Worms Eat My Garbage: How to Set Up and Maintain a Worm Composting System: Compost Food Waste, Produce Fertilizer for Houseplants and Garden, and Educate Your Kids and Family: Storey Publishing. 4. Asghar, W., Akça, M. O., Akça, H., Tarf, O. J., Kataoka, R., & Turgay, O. C. (2022). Alternative strategies to synthetic chemical fertilizers: revitalization of soil quality for sustainable agriculture using organic-based approaches New and Future Developments in Microbial Biotechnology and Bioengineering (pp. 1-30): Elsevier. 5. Asghar, W., & Kataoka, R. (2021). Effect of co-application of Trichoderma spp. with organic composts on plant growth enhancement, soil enzymes and fungal community in soil. Archives of microbiology, 203(7), 4281-4291.
|
|