Agronomy (Aug 2022)

The Short-Term Effects of Amendments on Nematode Communities and Diversity Patterns under the Cultivation of <i>Miscanthus × giganteus</i> on Marginal Land

  • Tatyana Stefanovska,
  • Andrzej Skwiercz,
  • Valentina Pidlisnyuk,
  • Oleksandr Zhukov,
  • Dawid Kozacki,
  • Aigerim Mamirova,
  • Robert Ato Newton,
  • Sergey Ust’ak

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy12092063
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 2063

Abstract

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The short-term effects of soil amendments on the structure, diversity and function of a nematode community of Miscanthus × giganteus was investigated. Crop was cultivated on marginal, nutrient-poor land amended with biochar in single and double doses (BD1 and BD2), biogas digestate (D), sewage sludge (SS), and hemicellulose waste (HW). Sampling was done after planting, in the middle and end of vegetation; morphology-based approach was used. 28 nematode taxa were identified, including 5 bacterivores genera, 4 fungivores genera, 5 herbivores genera (11 species), 2 omnivores genera, 5 predators genera. The general linear models, correspondence analysis and clustering were applied for evaluation. The total abundance of nematode taxa Filenchus, Dorylaimus, Cephalobus, Panagrolaimus, Aphelenchus, and Ditylenchus was depended on the sampling time and amendments. The incorporation of amendments affected nematode food web and resulted in suppression of plant-parasitic nematodes (PPNs). It was revealed that community structure was more mature for SS, less stable for D and had inconclusive effects for BD1, BD2, and HW. Using amendments ensured pest control benefits which is important given concern that PPNs can inflict crop damage during increased cultivation of M × g. Further research is needed to examine amendments which can minimise PPNs without reducing populations of nitrogen-fixing bacterivores and fungivores.

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