Soil prokaryotes associated with decreasing pathogen density during anaerobic soil disinfestation

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Abstract

Anaerobic soil disinfestation (ASD) is a chemical-independent method that can reduce pathogens. Although soil microbes play essential roles in ASD, the relationship between the microbial community structure and disinfestation efficiency remains unclear. To this end, we investigated changes in the microbial community and pathogen density during a period of ASD under field conditions for 14 days in a greenhouse using three different substrates. Soil samples were collected at 0, 3, 7, and 14 days after ASD treatment. The pathogen densities were analyzed by real-time polymerase chain reactions, prokaryotic community analysis was conducted using unidirectional pyrosequencing, and the factors related to pathogen density were statistically analyzed. The pathogen density rapidly decreased by >90% at 3 days after treatment and then slowly decreased until day 14, but the rate of decrease differed among the substrates. The microbial communities became altered after 3 days and recovered to their original state on day 14. The dipyridyl reaction, microbial diversity, richness, and community structure were not correlated with pathogen density. The most negatively correlated operational taxonomic units with pathogen density were Clostridia and Bacilli, both belonging to Firmicutes. These results suggested that the growth of specific microbes, but not the changes in microbial community structure, might be important for ASD disinfestation efficiency.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00