Decline in Morel Production upon Continuous Cropping Is Related to Changes in Soil Mycobiome

Author:

Zhang Yan12ORCID,Sun Sifan2,Luo Didi2,Mao Ping2,Rosazlina Rusly1,Martin Francis3ORCID,Xu Lingling2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Minden 11800, Penang, Malaysia

2. Key Laboratory of Plant-Microbe Collaboration, School of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Xi’an University, Xi’an 710065, China

3. Université de Lorraine, INRAE, Interactions Arbres/Microorganismes, F-54000 Nancy, France

Abstract

The black morel Morchella sextelata (Morchellaceae, Pezizales) is a valuable edible mushroom that can be cultivated on a large scale, but a severe yield decline is observed during continuous cropping. The effect of long-term cropping on soil-borne diseases and the dysbiosis of the microbiome and how these biotic factors affect the morel yield are not well understood. To help fill this knowledge gap, we designed an indoor experiment to investigate the influence of black morel cropping regimes on soil physicochemical properties, richness and distribution of fungal community, and morel primordial production. In this study, we employed rDNA metabarcoding and microbial network analysis to evaluate the effect of non-continuous and continuous cropping regimes on the fungal community during three developmental stages of black morel production, namely, the bare soil mycelium, mushroom conidial, and primordial stages. The results showed that during the first year, M. sextelata mycelium overwhelmed the resident soil fungal community by reducing the alpha diversity and niche breadth of soil fungal patterns by a greater amount compared to the continuous cropping regime, leading to high crop yield of 12.39 ± 6.09/quadrat but less complex soil mycobiome. To sustain continuous cropping, exogenous nutrition bags and morel mycelial spawn were consecutively added to the soil. The additional nutrient input stimulated the growth of fungal saprotrophic decomposers. The degrading activity of soil saprotrophs, including M.sextelata, caused a significant increase in soil nutrient content. This led to an inhibitory effect on the formation of morel primordia, resulting in a sharp decline to 0.29 ± 0.25/quadrat and 0.17 ± 0.24/quadrat, respectively, in the final morel cropping. Our findings provided a dynamic overview of the soil fungal community during morel mushroom production, allowing us to identify beneficial and detrimental fungal taxa in the soil mycobiome involved in morel cultivation. The information acquired from this study can be applied to mitigate the adverse impact of continuous cropping on the yield of black morel.

Funder

Special Plan of Education Department of Shaanxi Provincial Government

Key Research and Development Project of Department of Science and Technology of Shaanxi Province

Innovation Foundation of Science and Technology Bureau of Xi’an

Science and Technology Project of Science and Technology Bureau of Xi’an

Agence Nationale de la recherche

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology (medical)

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