Wheat Choice has Lasting Effect on Soil health and Yield
Wheat Choice has Lasting Effect on
Soil health and Yield
Researchers at the John Innes
Centre in Norwich and Rothamsted Research in Harpenden, examined the effects of
growing high and low take-all building susceptible wheat on the make-up of the
soil bacterial community associated with the second wheat crop. To their
surprise, the impact on the soil from wheat grown in the first year of the
experiment completely overrode any expected influence of the second year crop.
They found that the variety of
wheat grown in year one sets the scene in the soil and what is going on in the
soil long after harvesting the initial wheat crop determines the subsequent
year's root health and yield.
Dr Jake Malone, of the John Innes
Centre said: "We knew that plants and microbes in the soil interact in a
multitude of ways but we didn't realize just what an impact growing different
varieties of the same crop could have on the communities of microbes living in
soil. We hope to take this further and define exactly how different wheat crops
affect these important soil microbes."
These findings point to new
guidance for growers to choose the variety of wheat they grow in their first
rotation carefully, as this will determine the soil health of the second wheat
crop and could have long lasting effects on yields in subsequent years.
The research, funded by the
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), used a new
approach to analyses microbes in soil, based on the statistical comparison of
many bacterial genomes. The team examined the abundance and the genetic
structure of an important soil bacterium, Pseudomonas fluorescents. Different
strains of this microbe are responsible for boosting plant growth and
protecting crops against harmful diseases.
Both the amount of Pseudomonas in
the soil, and the nature of the strains of this microbe present were strongly
influenced by the type of wheat grown a year earlier. Growing wheat with a high
associated level of take-all fungus led to a greater abundance of Pseudomonas,
and seemed to select for bacteria that take an aggressive approach to other
microbes, wiping out members of another soil dwelling bacterial species,
Streptomyces, in laboratory experiments.
Meanwhile, growing a low take-all
building crop resulted in the soil supporting the second wheat crop having
lower overall levels of Pseudomonas, and selected for bacterial genes for iron
scavenging and plant growth manipulation. Unsurprisingly, yield was higher
following the low take-all building susceptible variety.
Dr Tim Mauchline from Rothamsted
Research added: "The finding that the footprint left from the previous
year's crop influences both crop yield and the soil-root microbial community
structure in the subsequent year is fascinating, and offers potential as an
exciting avenue of research to enhance crop protection."
The team intends to expand their
research to cover a five-year period, to examine how the community of soil
microbes develops, and how the presence of the take-all fungus and the associated
root disease affects the soil microbial community. Ultimately, this research
could lead to new approaches to control root diseases in cropping rotations, by
choosing the right plants to grow at the right time in order to promote healthy
soil and minimize the chances of disease outbreak.
For the study published today,
which has been funded by the BBSRC and the University of East Anglia, the wheat
variety rotation field experiment and the yield results were obtained on the
arable Experimental Farm at Rothamsted Research as part of the Wheat Genetic
Improvement Network (WGIN) core project which is supported by the Department of
the environment and rural affairs (Defra).
Professor Kim Hammond-Kosack from
Rothamsted Research said: "This is an excellent example where a project
funded for wheat genetic improvement has provided a useful resource for
distinct analyses and deeper insight."