Abstract

Serious crop diseases caused by soil microecological disturbances have been considered important causes of continuous cropping obstacles. Continuous long-term farming of cotton, an important cash crop, can lead to cotton yield and quality decline and the aggravation of soil-borne pathogens, such as Verticillium dahliae. A pot experiment was carried out in the continuous cropping cotton field soil of Xinjiang to investigate the impact of the biocontrol fungus Chaetomium globosum CEF-082 on removing the barrier to continuous cropping in cotton fields and its impact on soil microecology in cotton fields. The addition of CEF-082 increased the diversity and abundance of bacterial species, decreasing the abundance of pathogenic fungi, such as Fusarium and Verticillium, and decreasing the abundance ratio of fungi to bacteria (F/B) in soil according to high-throughput sequencing of cotton rhizosphere soil. Furthermore, the application of CEF-082 enhanced soil enzyme activity and soil pH value, controlled soil nutrient levels, and reduced the soil C/N ratio through the cotton root surrounding the soil nutrient level and enzyme activity change test. These modifications imply that the use of the biocontrol fungus CEF-082 may improve soil health, reduce the prevalence of soil-borne pathogens, restore damaged soil microecology, and have a favorable impact on easing the obstacles of continuous cotton cropping.

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