Abstract

PurposeThe application of fungicides is one of the main strategies to prevent clubroot disease. Currently, numerous studies focus on changes in the soil microbial community at different levels of clubroot disease severity. However, the effects of fungicides on the soil microbial community and causative pathogen, Plasmodiophora brassicae, while preventing clubroot disease remain unclear.MethodsIn this study, we evaluated the control efficacy of three fungicides (fluazinam, metalaxyl-mancozeb, and carbendazim) on clubroot disease of tumorous stem mustard in greenhouse experiment. Uninoculated and Water treatments after inoculation were performed as controls. At three (3 W) and six weeks (6 W) post-inoculation of P. brassicae, soil properties, bacterial composition (sequencing of 16S rRNA genes), and effector gene expression of the pathogen were analyzed. The correlation of these factors with disease index (DI) was explored.ResultsFluazinam was the most effective in controlling clubroot disease of tumorous stem mustard with a controlled efficacy of 59.81%, and the abundance of P. brassicae in the soil decreased 21.29% after 3 weeks of treatment. Compared with other treatments, twelve out of twenty effector genes showed higher expression in fluazinam 3 W samples. Different fungicides had different effects on soil properties. EC (electrical conductivity), the main factor that positively associated with DI, was significantly lower in fluazinam treatment than the other two fungicide treatments. The application of fungicides, especially carbendazim, significantly reduced bacterial α-diversity and the composition of soil bacteria. Pseudomonas, Microbacterium, and Sphingobacterium (positively correlated with DI) were enriched in Water, metalaxyl-mancozeb, and carbendazim treatments, but were less abundant in fluazinam treatment. Among the three fungicide treatments, DI was significantly negatively correlated with Shannon and Chao 1 indices. Soil properties and the top bacterial genera that positively correlated with DI were influenced to a lesser degree in the fluazinam treatment.ConclusionAmong three fungicides, fluazinam was the most effective agent with the highest control effects against clubroot disease. The strong virulence of fluazinam against P. brassicae was one of the main reasons for the prevention of clubroot disease, and in addition the alteration of rhizosphere bacterial community by fluazinam to the detriment of P. brassicae infection. Based on our results, EC could be an indicator of the severity of clubroot disease.

Highlights

  • Tumorous stem mustard (Brassica juncea var. tumida) is the raw material of China’s famous pickle, Zhacai, which is mainly grown in the provinces of Chongqing and Zhejiang, and has important economic value

  • Except for Total nitrogen (TN) and pH, which significantly increased in F-1000 treatment compared with Uninoculated soil, the F-1000 treatment offset the changes in soil properties altered by the inoculation of P. brassicae, and soil properties tend to be consistent with that of healthy soil, electric conductivity (EC)

  • A different trend of soil property changes was observed in the M-500 and C-800 treatments, with EC significantly increasing in those soil samples

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Summary

Introduction

Tumorous stem mustard (Brassica juncea var. tumida) is the raw material of China’s famous pickle, Zhacai, which is mainly grown in the provinces of Chongqing and Zhejiang, and has important economic value. Clubroot disease is one of the main factors affecting the yield and quality of this crop. The application of fungicides can change soil physicochemical properties and alter the soil microbial community structure (Zhang et al, 2020). The application of fungicides may directly or indirectly change soil physicochemical properties and soil microbial communities, disturbing the stability of the vegetable-soil ecosystem. Soil properties and microbial communities are significantly altered during the infection process of P. brassicae (Lebreton et al, 2019). It is unknown how the application of fungicides in soil contaminated by P. brassicae changes soil properties and microbial communities

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