Abstract

The inoculation of soil with a bio-fertilizer (BF), with arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi, characterizes a Symbiotic (S) agriculture mode, aimed at promoting the yield and health of crops through modifications in the rhizosphere as well as in the plant phenotype. The main objective of this study was to reduce the incidence of Olive Quick Decline Syndrome (OQDS, involving Xylella fastidiosasubsp.pauca) that afflicts the olive groves in Apulia (Italy). Non-inoculated control (C) plants were compared with Symbiotic (S) plants inoculated with 20 kg ha-1 of Micosat F ®, through a 15 cm deep scarification, in the groves of seven farms covering an area of 27 ha. In addition to a visual observation of 484 plants, to obtain a gradation of the disease severity, some objective rapid type methods were utilized to survey the plants and soil , namely leaf pH, NIR tomoscopy of the leaves, hay-litter-bag probes coupled with NIR spectroscopy and the prediction of soil induced respiration. The fingerprinting of the S and C types of leaves and litter-bags was ascertained by means of the use of a random forest algorithm in the classification matrices. The results on the symptoms appeared variable: they were significantly mitigated in two groves out of six, but they were aggravated in one. All the rapid measurements became essentials in a “holistic” model which was able to explain over 95% of the average mitigation / null / aggravation response to BF inoculation. The holistic model gathers differential and compositional analyses of the leaf (pH, crude protein, water) and of the soil (respiration), but depends mainly on the fingerprinting of the C and S leaves and litter-bags. Two keys were identified for a successful inoculation: a high degree of variability of the soil conditions permitting hospitality for the BF with enhancement of the microbial activity in the S soil (lowering the fingerprint of the control litter-bags) and homogeneity of the leaves (with increases in the fingerprint of the S leaves treated with BF). In short, the inoculation of diseased plants with one BF consortium is far from being the ultimate remedy to mitigate OQDS in all situations. Further studies are needed, at a field level, to clarify the soil hosting capacity and to define the mycorrhizal and / or endophytic * plant * pathogen interactions, even using rapid methods.

Highlights

  • Over the last decade, a plant desiccation epidemic, called CoDiRO (Olive Quick Decline Syndrome, OQDS), has developed in the olive groves of south Puglia (Italy

  • One of the main biological factors of this epidemic outbreak has been identified as Xylella fastidiosa subsp. pauca ST53 3,4,5, a disease that is universally known for having damaged orchards and plants in the Americas [6,7]

  • Scortichini et al 10, after a three-year survey, obtained promising results that suggest that an integrated management, which includes regular pruning and soil harrowing, with spring and summer spray treatments with Dentamet® to reduce the severity of X. fastidiosa, may assist in the control of OQDS disease

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Summary

Introduction

A plant desiccation epidemic, called CoDiRO (Olive Quick Decline Syndrome, OQDS), has developed in the olive groves of south Puglia (Italy). Upon an attack by pathogens or insects, plants can "enlist" the help of protective microorganisms and increase their microbial activity to contrast pathogens 11. The delivery of a complex Bio-Fertilizer (BF), based on microbial consortia 12, can act by modifying the plant's physiology and lowering the in-vivo raw leaf pH, which is a concrete and easy endpoint to measure. As a result of the inoculum, a consequent activation or suppression of otherwise silent genes is obtained, which recent studies on the genome of plants have identified as being closely related to contrast and alarm activities toward several phyto-pathologies. A demonstration of this was pertaing to the recovery of pears heavily affected by Erwinia amylovora fire blast 13

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