Title of article
Effect of soil disinfection with chemical and biological methods on bacterial communities
Author/Authors
Rokunuzzaman, Md Ehime University - The United Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences, Japan , Hayakawa, Ayumi Kochi University - Faculty of Agriculture, Japan , Yamane, Shinzo Kochi University - Faculty of Agriculture, Japan , Tanaka, Sota Kochi University - Graduate School of Kuroshio Science, Japan , Ohnishi, Kouhei Kochi University - Research Institute of Molecular Genetics, Japan
From page
141
To page
148
Abstract
Little is known about the effect of soil disinfection on bacterial communities. Soils were treated with an effective chemical fumigant chloropicrin and biofumigant mustard greens (Brassica juncea). While mustard greens did not affect the soil bacterial community structures very much, chloropicrin greatly reduced soil biomass and bacterial species richness. Chloropicrin also influenced the bacterial community structure, making the phylum Firmicutes dominant by occupying about 75%. In more than two months, the proportion of Firmicutes was reduced to the basal level, and the phyla Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria became dominant. Since mustard greens worked as carbon sources for soil reduction, soils were treated with wheat bran and a low concentration of ethanol. Soil reduction with wheat bran and ethanol did not influence the soil bacterial community structures. Beta diversity analyzed by Principal Coordinate Analysis showed that bacterial communities in the soils except chloropicrin-applied soils formed a cluster. All together, biofumigant mustard greens, a probable substitute for chloropicrin,were demonstrated to causemuch less damage on soil bacterial community than chemical chloropicrin.
Keywords
Pyrosequencing , Chloropicrin , Mustard greens , Disinfection
Journal title
Egyptian Journal Of Basic and Applied Sciences
Journal title
Egyptian Journal Of Basic and Applied Sciences
Record number
2596889
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