Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis

A holistic study on soil-borne pathogen management with suppressive soils was performed in Scania, Sweden. The study was designed to comprise both social and biological research to gain a systemic perspective on the real-life situation of Swedish farmers regarding plant pathogens and soil management...

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Autor principal: Löbmann, Michael
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of People and Society 2015
Materias:
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author Löbmann, Michael
author_browse Löbmann, Michael
author_facet Löbmann, Michael
author_sort Löbmann, Michael
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description A holistic study on soil-borne pathogen management with suppressive soils was performed in Scania, Sweden. The study was designed to comprise both social and biological research to gain a systemic perspective on the real-life situation of Swedish farmers regarding plant pathogens and soil management. The social research comprised semi-structured interviews with a small number of farmers and an online survey, which could not be sent to farmers and therefore was without results. Possible reasons for the failure are discussed. For the biological research, soils from ten Swedish farms with different cropping and management regimes were assessed for effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms in wheat, physical and chemical soil parameters, and the soil nematode trophic community as identified at the family level. Soil effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms were assessed in two categories: (1) biological or non-biological effects and (2) suppressive or conducive effects. Different soils had both conducive and suppressive effects, which were due to either the soil biotic community or chemical or physical properties of the soil. Management regimes with permanent plant cover had biological effects and management regimes with interrupted plant cover had non-biological effects. The nutrient balance was related to biological suppressiveness. Biologically conducive soils had either high or low nutrient content, while biologically suppressive soils had intermediate nutrient levels. The total number of nematodes and the abundance of predators and omnivores were not related to the soil organic matter content. The abundance of hyphal-feeding nematodes was correlated with soil organic matter content. No relationship was found between the soil nematode trophic community, the soil management, and soil effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms. Therefore, nematode trophic guilds do not indicate soil effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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spelling RepoSLU88982016-03-07T16:00:12Z Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis Relationer mellan markbehandling och jordens förmåga att motverka patogener i Skåne : en tvärvetenskaplig analys Löbmann, Michael soil suppressiveness plant pathogen Pythium ultimum wheat cropping sequence conservation biological control agroecology nematodes bioindicator A holistic study on soil-borne pathogen management with suppressive soils was performed in Scania, Sweden. The study was designed to comprise both social and biological research to gain a systemic perspective on the real-life situation of Swedish farmers regarding plant pathogens and soil management. The social research comprised semi-structured interviews with a small number of farmers and an online survey, which could not be sent to farmers and therefore was without results. Possible reasons for the failure are discussed. For the biological research, soils from ten Swedish farms with different cropping and management regimes were assessed for effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms in wheat, physical and chemical soil parameters, and the soil nematode trophic community as identified at the family level. Soil effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms were assessed in two categories: (1) biological or non-biological effects and (2) suppressive or conducive effects. Different soils had both conducive and suppressive effects, which were due to either the soil biotic community or chemical or physical properties of the soil. Management regimes with permanent plant cover had biological effects and management regimes with interrupted plant cover had non-biological effects. The nutrient balance was related to biological suppressiveness. Biologically conducive soils had either high or low nutrient content, while biologically suppressive soils had intermediate nutrient levels. The total number of nematodes and the abundance of predators and omnivores were not related to the soil organic matter content. The abundance of hyphal-feeding nematodes was correlated with soil organic matter content. No relationship was found between the soil nematode trophic community, the soil management, and soil effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms. Therefore, nematode trophic guilds do not indicate soil effects on Pythium ultimum disease symptoms. SLU/Dept. of People and Society 2015 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8898/
spellingShingle soil
suppressiveness
plant pathogen
Pythium ultimum
wheat
cropping sequence
conservation
biological control
agroecology
nematodes
bioindicator
Löbmann, Michael
Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis
title Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis
title_full Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis
title_fullStr Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis
title_full_unstemmed Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis
title_short Relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern Sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis
title_sort relationships between soil management and pathogen suppressive soils in southern sweden : an interdisciplinary analysis
topic soil
suppressiveness
plant pathogen
Pythium ultimum
wheat
cropping sequence
conservation
biological control
agroecology
nematodes
bioindicator