The effect of slash/mulch and alleycropping bean production systems on soil microbiota in the tropics

Martha Rosemeyer, Nicole Viaene, H. Swartz, J. Kettler

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Mulch applied to tropical soil may increase soil health both through stimulation of microbiota beneficial to plant nutrient
uptake and the suppression of plant disease. To test this hypothesis, we compared beans in three cropping systems: (1)
mulched with secondary vegetation (slash/mulch), (2) mulched with foliage from alleycropped nitrogen-fixing trees, Calliandra
calothyrsus, Gliricidia sepium and Inga edulis (alleycrop/mulch), and (3) unmulched, for their effect on positive
microbial interactions (nodulation with Rhizobium and arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM)), and pathogenic associations (foliar and
root diseases) in long-term field experiments in Costa Rica. In some dry years slash/mulched beans nodulated significantly
more than the unmulched, though in wet years the nodule biomass was not significantly different between treatments. Beans
grown in alleycropping systems mulched with foliage from Calliandra and Inga had lower nodule biomass than beans in
slash/mulched and Gliricidia mulched plots at 3 and 5 weeks, probably due to high nitrogen levels from the decomposing
vegetation of the tree mulch. Roots of bean plants were 95–98% colonized by AM fungi and there were no differences
between the slash/mulched beans and the unmulched treatments. Slash/mulch had no effect on the foliar diseases angular leaf
spot and web blight, due to their naturally low incidence in that year; slash/mulched decreased the severity of anthracnose
(caused by Colletotrichum lindemuthianum). Slash/mulch decreased severity of a Fusarium-type root rot, but increased a
Rhizoctonia-type. In the laboratory, microbial activity as determined by measurements of CO2 respiration was greater in
the slash/mulched than the unmulched system due to the high respiration of the mulch material. Our hypothesis that the
use of mulch would favor mutualistic symbionts was not supported, which may be due to weather and nutrient interference.
However, the hypothesis that mulch would reduce disease incidence was supported for certain diseases. A comparison of the
microbial community with those of nearby natural systems can help provide a standard for the assessment of microbial health
in agroecosystems and allow us to avoid the circularity of defining microbial communities as ‘healthy’ because they are found
in cropping systems whose plants appear without disease
Oorspronkelijke taalEngels
TijdschriftApplied Soil Ecology
Volume15
Exemplaarnummer1
Pagina's (van-tot)49-59
ISSN0929-1393
DOI's
PublicatiestatusGepubliceerd - 2000

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