Author:
Simpfendorfer S.,Kirkegaard J. A.,Heenan D. P.,Wong P. T. W.
Abstract
Wheat seedlings were grown in intact cores of soil removed from 26 sites
throughout southern New South Wales where slower seedling growth in
direct-drilled (DD) soil than in cultivated soil had been commonly reported.
Experiments were conducted in a controlled environment using soil cultivation
and fumigation to assess the role of physical and biological constraints to
growth under direct drilling. Populations of various microbial groups
(especially Pythium and
Pseudomonas spp.) were assessed for their involvement in
the growth reductions.
Soil cultivation increased the growth of seedlings relative to the DD
treatment in cores from 18 of the 26 sites (mean increase 43%), while
sterilisation increased growth in DD cores from 25 of the sites (mean increase
68%). The growth response to cultivation was less than that to
sterilisation in cores from most sites, suggesting that cultivation only
partially removes the growth limitation. With the exception of one site,
cultivating sterilised cores provided no additional growth benefits over the
sterilised DD treatment, indicating that biological rather than physical
factors per se were predominantly responsible for the
reduced growth.
The reduced growth in DD cores was not associated with the presence of any of
the common soil-borne fungal pathogens of wheat. Averaged across sites,
Pseudomonas populations in the rhizosphere of seedlings
grown in cultivated cores were reduced by 50% compared with the DD
treatment, while sterilisation reduced populations by 65%. An
assessment of the inhibitory activity of pseudomonads towards wheat seedlings
in a test-tube bioassay indicated that reduced growth in DD cores was more
closely related to the deleterious activity of
Pseudomonas spp. toward root growth than to their
population in the rhizosphere. A close relationship existed between the
inhibitory activity of Pseudomonas spp. and the response
of wheat seedlings to both cultivation (r =
0.859) and sterilisation (r mp;equals; 0.842).
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
14 articles.
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