Abstract
Four strains of Arbuscular Mycorrhizal (AM) biofertilizer fungi, combined with two potato cultivars, were in-field tested in a four-replicate arrangement in a factorial experiment. As far as general combinability is concerned, cv. Agria was more responsive to different inocula (yield +5.56%, P 0.02) and to two strains in particular (+8%). On the other hand, the results with Innovator, a cultivar that yields 33% less than Agria, showed a significant reduction in the number of tubers for three AM strains, thus proving a clear genetic Biofertilizer * Cultivar interaction. The study of hay litter-bags has shown a high NIR spectral fingerprint for the Cultivar factor (81%), while the Inoculation factor showed a higher spectral fingerprint in Agria (76%) than in Innovator (65%). The Substrate Induced Respiration predicted from the NIR-SCiO spectra of the litter-bags was significantly increased after inoculation (+6.3%, P 0.04), but appeared lower for Agria (-5.4%) vs. Innovator (P 0.05), with a non-significant interaction. The obtained results show that the adaptation of the AM strains to the genetics of potato cultivars is a first step toward reducing chemical inputs, with consequent benefits for the environment, but without an excessive reduction in yield. The litter-bag technique can therefore be recommended for a simplified monitoring of the complicated plant-mycorrhizosphere relationship.
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2020
Volpato Silvia, et al.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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Introduction
In 1990, Reganold Many experiments have shown that Arbuscular Mycorrhizal (AM) biofertilizer fungi can overcome the nutrient limitations on plant growth by enhancing nutrient acquisition. Furthermore, their benefits ranges from stress alleviation to bioremediation in soils polluted with heavy metals Potato plants are known to be sensitive to water stress and have a low P uptake, due to their rarefied root hair system. Therefore, AM fungi can alleviate abiotic stress caused by low levels of P and/or a partially localized water deficit The objective of the current study has been to study the influence of AM on the growth of potato plants of different cultivars, without limited water and P resources. Since functional diversity is present in AM symbiosis, with different combinations of plants and AM species The litter-bag technique, coupled with NIR spectra, has recently been developed as a simplified monitoring system of the complicated plant -mycorrhizosphere relationship in biofertilizer experiments
Materials And Methods
In 2018, four types of Arbuscular Mycorrhizae (AM) ( a>b; P 0.05 (Friedman s test) The chemometric elaborations were carried out by means of SCiOTM-Lab software, using the random forest classificatory method. The method used for the two cultivars considered the Spectral Fingerprint of the biofertilized litterbags (SF_A-D), compared to the Control (SF_K) cells, and the cultivars were tested for probability as one proportion, using MedCalc online software. An NIR-SCiO equation, taken from an experimental trial on tomato plants Individual data of the SIR capacity were analyzed, by means of a bi-factorial linear model Yield data from the Control and biofertilized sub-plots and their size effects were analyzed using Friedman s test for paired comparisons
Biofertilizer
Cultivar
Yield
#Tubers
Mean tuber weight
Yield
#Tubers
Mean tuber weight
t ha-1
k ha-1
g
t ha-1
k ha-1
g
A)
52.500 b
325 b
162
31.389
300 b
104
B)
54.625 ab
344 ab
160
33.028
347 ab
96
C)
55.917 a
372 a
152
33.292
322 ab
109
D)
56.000 ab
349 ab
161
32.222
285 b
116
K) Control
51.875 b
347 ab
154
34.417
356 a
99
Effect Size
Ln A/K
1.2%
-6.6%
7.8%
-9.2%
-17.0%
7.8%
Ln B/K
5.2%
-0.8%
6.0%
-4.1%
-2.4%
-1.7%
Ln C/K
7.5%
7.0%
0.5%
-3.3%
-9.8%
6.5%
Ln D/K
7.7%
0.4%
7.3%
-6.6%
-22.2%
15.6%
Ln Mean A÷D / K
5.56%
0.10%
3.42%
-5.62%
-11.82%
7.60%
P general (Biofertilizer)
0.02
0.36
0.45
0.07
0.01
0.65
Results
Divergent results were obtained for the two cultivars ( The two dimensions of the letter-bags are highlighted in The respiratory parameter of the soil responded positively to the biofertilizers, with an average value of 223 mcg CO2 g-1 in the control, which increased to 237 in the biofertilized samples (+6%, P 0.04). On the other hand, the values of the litter-bags from the Unlike the trend observed for the SIR parameter, the spectral fingerprinting of the litterbags from the The positive correlation of the respiratory and the fingerprint appears throughout
Discussion
The preliminary results from this experiment confirm the luxuriating effects albeit of an emersion of a genotype * genotype interaction. The maximum amount of +8% registered for Douds et Davies Lone According to Rai The biofertilizer dose can be under the Mitscherlich law. Three biofertilizers were compared in one potato cv., According to Sakha A critical point is the choice for the level of mineral fertilization The results of Ekin Other effects that can corroborate natural AM sources can be obtained through the use of potassium phosphites (KPhi). Tambascio In this experiment, the litter-bag features were closely correlated with the yield, thus confirming the importance of the respiratory capacity of the control soil and above all the increment that is realized after the inoculation, as clearly outlined in
Conclusion
The main result of this experiment is that a possible AM * cultivar interaction, which had previously been shown for corn The litter-bag technique may be recommended for a simplified monitoring of the complicated plant-mycorrhizospher relationship, preferably combined with a foliar pH measurement. Thanks to John van Klaren for the valuable support to the symbiotic method in Holland.