Author:
James, R. A.,Kirkegaard J. A.,Munns R.
Abstract
Wheat seedlings were grown in intact cores of soil removed from 2 field
experiments in southern New South Wales where the soil-borne pathogen
Rhizoctonia solani had been implicated as a cause of
slower seedling growth in direct-drilled soil compared with cultivated soil.
Experiments were conducted with intact cores in controlled environments using
fumigation to assess the role of Rhizoctonia in the
growth responses. Seedling growth was lower in direct-drilled cores than
cultivated cores from both sites at a very early stage. The growth reductions
were completely removed by fumigation, confirming previous reports that
biological factors rather than physical factors were responsible for reduced
growth.
In cores from the Galong site, Rhizoctonia symptoms were
severe at the 5-leaf stage (8 on a scale of 0-10) and the reduction in leaf
growth at earlier stages coincided with the appearance of
Rhizoctonia symptoms on the roots. Seedling growth was
not reduced until the severity was >5. This corresponded with a
root-cutting experiment where shoot growth was unaffected until 3 of the 5
seminal roots of healthy seedlings were removed. Pre-sowing soil disturbance
to a depth of 5 cm in unfumigated soil increased shoot growth from 47 to
84% of the fumigated controls with no further improvement when the
depth of disturbance was increased to 10 cm, suggesting the pathogens
responsible were confined to the 0-5 cm layer and were not completely
eliminated by disturbance. Pre-sowing disturbance had no effect on shoot
growth in fumigated soil.
In cores from the Harden site, Rhizoctonia symptoms were
moderate at the 5-leaf stage; however, reductions in leaf and root growth at
earlier stages occurred 7 days before any symptoms of
Rhizoctonia or other pathogens were visible on the
roots. The results suggest that other inhibitory organisms are present at the
Harden site and cause significant reductions in seedling growth in the absence
of visible disease symptoms. Pythium spp. pathogenic to
wheat are known to be present at the site but their role has not been
confirmed. Further studies are required to identify the inhibitory organisms
and to determine the mechanisms by which they reduce early seedling growth.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
9 articles.
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