Abstract

Thifluzamide, a succinate dehydrogenase inhibitor fungicide, has been used extensively for many diseases control and has the risk of accumulation in soil ecology. In order to study the ecotoxicity of thifluzamide to soil fungal communities, typical corn field soils in north (Tai’an) and south (Guoyang) China were treated with thifluzamide (0, 0.1, 1.0 and 10.0 mg/kg) and incubated for 60 days. Thifluzamide exposure promoted soil basal respiration, and significantly reduced the number of soil culturable fungi and the abundance of soil fungi (RT-qPCR) in middle and late treatment period (15, 30, 60 days). Illumina Mi-Seq sequencing revealed that thifluzamide could reduce fungal alpha diversity (Sobs, Shannon, Simpson indexes) and change fungal community structure. FUN Guild analysis showed that the relative abundance of Undefined Saprotroph increased after the thifluzamide treatment, whereas that of Plant Pathogen decreased, and we concluded that exposure to thifluzamide could change the function of soil fungi. This study evaluated the soil ecological risk caused by thifluzamide’s release into soil, providing a basis for its rational application.

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