Abstract

Wheat root rot disease due to soil-borne fungal pathogens leads to tremendous yield losses worth billions of dollars worldwide every year. It is very important to study the relationship between rhizosphere soil fungal diversity and wheat roots to understand the occurrence and development of wheat root rot disease. A significant difference in fungal diversity was observed in the rhizosphere soil of healthy and diseased wheat roots in the heading stage, but the trend was the opposite in the filling stage. The abundance of most genera with high richness decreased significantly from the heading to the filling stage in the diseased groups; the richness of approximately one-third of all genera remained unchanged, and only a few low-richness genera, such as Fusarium and Ceratobasidium, had a very significant increase from the heading to the filling stage. In the healthy groups, the abundance of most genera increased significantly from the heading to filling stage; the abundance of some genera did not change markedly, or the abundance of very few genera increased significantly. Physical and chemical soil indicators showed that low soil pH and density, increases in ammonium nitrogen, nitrate nitrogen and total nitrogen contributed to the occurrence of wheat root rot disease. Our results revealed that in the early stages of disease, highly diverse rhizosphere soil fungi and a complex community structure can easily cause wheat root rot disease. The existence of pathogenic fungi is a necessary condition for wheat root rot disease, but the richness of pathogenic fungi is not necessarily important. The increases in ammonium nitrogen, nitrate nitrogen and total nitrogen contributed to the occurrence of wheat root rot disease. Low soil pH and soil density are beneficial to the occurrence of wheat root rot disease.

Highlights

  • Wheat root rot disease due to soil-borne fungal pathogens leads to tremendous yield losses worth billions of dollars worldwide every year

  • According to the diversity index, the community richness and diversity of the diseased groups were higher than those of the healthy groups in the heading stage, and there was a significant difference in community diversity between the diseased group and the healthy group (Shannon index: P

  • The community richness and diversity of the disease group and the healthy group in the filling stage were higher than those of the disease group and the healthy group in the heading stage, and there was a significant difference between the disease group and the healthy group in the heading stage (Sobs index: P

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Summary

Introduction

Wheat root rot disease due to soil-borne fungal pathogens leads to tremendous yield losses worth billions of dollars worldwide every year. It is very important to study the relationship between rhizosphere soil fungal diversity and wheat roots to understand the occurrence and development of wheat root rot disease. With the destruction of soil structure, the degradation of soil and the increase in soil-borne pathogens, wheat, as one of the three major staple foods in the world, grown in Asia (China), Australia, Europe, North America, and South America, is vulnerable to attack by a complex of root pathogens, which results in tremendous yield losses [13]. All cultivars of wheat are attacked by several soil-borne fungal pathogens that cause root diseases [15]. There are no resistant varieties among adapted cultivars of wheat [20,21] and no chemical controls, certain seed treatments can provide some early benefits to seedling health [21,22]

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