|
KRASILNIKOV TABLE OF CONTENTS
Part IV, continued:
Microbial inhibitors and their action on
plants
These data show how large and versatile is the
microflora which produces biotic substances. With the aid of these substances,
the microorganisms growing in the soil activate the growth, nourishment, and
many other vital processes of both higher and lower organisms.
In soils, as well as in other natural substrate,
there are microorganism-inhibitors. which, in course of their metabolic
activity, suppress the growth and development of higher and lower plants. They
form special substances which are toxic to plant tissues and organs. Toxins, or
phytotoxins formed by phytopathogenic fungi and bacteria, were studied long ago
by numerous investigators (see Kuprevich, 1947; Sukhorukov, 1952; Bilai, 1953,
Gorlenko, 1953; Goiman, 1954). However, the question of whether these organisms
produce toxic substances directly in soil remained unsolved in the literature.
It is known that many species of fungi and bacteria form toxins which act on
animal organisms. Growing on food products, fodder, and on various plant
residues, they excrete toxic substances. Upon feeding these products to animals,
one often observes a strong case of poisoning (Pidoplichko, 1953).
Investigations show that microbial inhibitors may
poison plants with their toxins under conditions of their natural growth in
soil, if favorable conditions for such growth are formed. They suppress
germination of seeds, the growth of sprouts and plant growth in general and
decrease the total crop. Consequently, when there is a massive growth of these
organisms, they may become an important factor in determining the fertility of
soil and the crop yield of plants.
The suppressing action of microbial inhibitors is
also manifested in the growth of lower plants--fungi, bacteria, algae and
others. In such cases, the microbes are called antagonists.
Microbial inhibitors are found among various groups
of lower forms: bacteria, fungi, and actinomycetes. Greig-Smith (1911)
established the fact that toxic substances formed by certain bacteria, suppress
the growth of plants. Ressel (1933) ascribed great importance to Protozoa, which
consume microbial cells. Hutchinson and Thaysen (1918), Lewis (1920), and
Laudenberger (1952) noticed in certain nonsporiferous bacteria of the genus
Pseudomonas the ability to synthesize potent toxic substances. Johnson
and Murwin (1931), and later Braun (1950), discovered this ability in
Pseudomonas tabaci, the causative agent of tobacco disease. The ability
to form toxic substances was also found in other bacterial groups.
Among the group of nonsporiferous bacterial
inhibitors, representatives of the genera Bacterium and
Pseudomonas, are comparatively often encountered and lose often those of
the genus Rhizobium. They are often found in the rhizosphere of
vegetative plants. We studied more than 300 cultures of these organisms isolated
at different times from different soils, from the chestnut soils of the
Trans-Volga region, the serozem soils of Central Asia, and the podsol soils of
the Moscow and other regions.
Of this number of cultures which were studied, about
100 suppress to a greater or smaller degree the growth of plants and the
germination of seeds, Strongly expressed herbicidal properties were possessed by
certain strains of Ps. flourescens, Ps. pyocyanea and Bacterium
sp. They completely or almost completely inhibited the germination of needs of
clover, vetch, and wheat (Figure 86). The seeds merely sprouted and died, or did
not show any signs of germination.

Figure 86. Suppression of the germination process of clover seeds by
nonsporiferous bacterial inhibitors, Posudomonas sp.
a--control; b--in the presence of bacterial inhibitors.
The toxic properties of many sporiferous bacteria
are sharply expressed, We studied more than 350 cultures, isolated from various
soils of the Soviet Union. The bacteria were grown in liquid nutrient media. The
seeds were treated by soaking them for several hours in the culture fluid. Seeds
of plants treated with culture fluid were germinated on cotton or on paper which
had been wetted with water.
The toxic or herbicidal effect of the bacterial
fluid revealed itself in the suppression of growth and the lowering of the
percentage of germinating seeds, Analyses have shown that approximately 20-30
per cent of the cultures investigated possessed inhibitory proportion. Among the
bacteria isolated from turfy podsol soils, the number of inhibitors was large
(about 34-45 per cent).
The nature and strength of their effect vary in
different cultures. Some organisms completely or almost completely inhibit the
germination of seeds (Figure 87), others are less inhibitory, and still others
do not show any inhibitory effect whatsoever.

Figure 87. Effect of sporiferous bacterial inhibitors on the germination of
plant seeds. The seeds were soaked in the bacteria-culture fluid and
germinated on cotton or on paper wetted with water:
A--effect of Bac. mesentericus (strain 50) on germination of wheat
seeds: 1--control, seeds soaked in water; 2--seeds soaked in culture fluid;
B--effect of Bac. mesentericus (strain 67) on the germination of seeds
of peas: 3--seeds soaked in culture fluid; 4--control, seeds soaked in water.
The species of the inhibitors studied by us mainly
belonged to Bac. mesentericus and Bac. subtilis.
The capacity to suppress the germination of seeds
and the growth of seedlings is revealed in various degrees among strains
belonging to the same species. Among cultures of the bacterium Bac.
messentericus, we found more than 180 strains isolated from various soils,
including 100 strains from the podsol soil of the Chashnikovo Experimental
Station. Among these were some very strong inhibitors, while others did not
inhibit plants growth at all. Some of them inhibited the germination of wheat
seeds, others those of peas, vetch or clover, while some of thorn inhibited the
germination of wheat, peas, vetch and clover seeds. In Table 95 data are
presented from an experiment with vetch and clover.
Table 95 Effect of metabolic products of bacteria on the growth of
plants (calculated for the 30th day of growth, in cm)
|
Bacterial cultures |
Clover: height of shoots |
Clover: length of roots |
Vetch: height of shoots |
Vetch: length of roots |
| Control |
5.0 |
4.0 |
24.5 |
12.0 |
| Bac. subtilis strain 7 |
4.5 |
0 |
26.0 |
6.0 |
| Bac. subtilis strain 15 |
5.5 |
0.5 |
22.0 |
3.5 |
| Bac. brevis. strain 3 |
4.8 |
0-0.2 |
25.0 |
2.5 |
| Bac. mesentericus |
5.2 |
0 |
25.5 |
1.0 |
Among sporiferous and nonsporiferous bacteria, there
are sometimes strains possessing an organotropic or selective herbicidal action.
They either suppress the growth of only this root system or of only the aerial
parts. We found cultures which completely inhibited the growth of the roots of
vetch and wheat. The seeds sprouted without the formation of roots, while the
latter were very much reduced (Figure 88). The aerial part developed more or
less normally as long as the seeds contained nutrient substances.

Figure 88. Suppression of growth of wheat roots by bacterial
inhibitors:
a--experiment; b--control.
Some bacterial strains in our collection (three
nonsporiferous and four sporiferous strains) inhibited the growth of the aerial
parts, but did not affect the root system. The needs germinated a root, while
the aerial part was strongly reduced (Figure 89).

Figure 89. Inhibition of growth parts of vetch by cultures of bacterial
inhibitors:
a--experimental, b--control plant.
Certain strains of bacteria suppress the sporulation
process of lower organisms, the formation of zygotes in phycomycetes and the
formation of spores in yeasts (Krasil'nikov, 1947 a). It is possible that there
are microbes which inhibit the fruiting process of higher plants as
well.
In our collection of actinomycetes there are strains
which cause chlorosis of higher plants by the action of their metabolic
products. Chlorosis appeared in corn and wheat after treating the seeds before
sowing with a culture fluid of certain species of actinomycetes and, even more
markedly, with purified preparations of antibiotics. If the seeds of these
plants are kept in a solution of an antibiotic for two, to four hours before
sowing, the seedlings are completely colorless, without the slightest sign of
the formation of chlorophyll. The growth of much plants is suppressed and, soon
ceases altogether. In some cases the plants, recover, become green, and continue
to grow more or less normally,
If the seeds are treated with weaker solutions of
the antibiotic, one obtains seedlings which are slightly green and somewhat
etiolated. Strongly etiolated plants are obtained upon the treatment of seeds
with streptomycin. Soaking seeds for two hours, in a solution of one microgram
per ml causes the complete etiolation of the seedlings. The latter do not become
green for a period of 15-30 days and finally die. A suppression of chlorophyll
synthesis is caused by aureomycin, terramycin and other antibiotics.
We obtained the etiolation of duckweed by growing it
in a nutrient solution to which an antibiotic had been added. Depending on the
concentration of the antibiotic, the growth of the plants was inhibited to a
greater or smaller degree. The extent of the appearance of the green color also
varies, from slight chlorosis to full colorlessness.
Certain toxins of microbial origin cause the
phenomenon of chlorosis in grapevines, According to our observations, this
phenomenon may be due to fungi of the genus Fusarium. We found certain
strains, the toxins of which caused the etiolation of shoots, of cuttings, and
grape stock, when treated before planting in the soil. The plants that grew from
them had light green leaves with a yellowish hue, their development was slow,
and other deviations were observed which are characteristic of chlorosis of
grape vines (Krasil'nikov and Kublitskaya, 1956).
This picture of the etiolation of cuttings was
observed by us after the treatment of the vine with antibiotics of actinomycete
origin. Certain strains of gray and pigmented actinomycetes synthesized
substances which inhibit the formation of chlorophyll in the leaves of
grapevines. Cuttings, when immersed with their basal ends in the crude fluid
culture and subsequently planted in the soil developed and showed obvious signs
of etiolation.
The inhibition by antibiotics of the formation of
chlorophyll in plants has been mentioned by certain other investigators.
Provasoli, Huntner, and Schatz (1948) obtained colorless cultures of
Euglena sp. under the influence of streptomycin. The antibiotic was added
to the nutrient solution in small quantities; under its influence the
chloroplast of the cells was destroyed, as a result of which completely
etiolated forms of organisms were obtained.
The phenomenon of chlorosis as an effect of
streptomycin was observed in cereals (wheat, corn, etc) by Von Euler (1947) and
Hagborn (1956). They wetted the seeds of plants in the antibiotic solution and
planted them in the soil. The seedlings were devoid of green color.
Berezova and Sudakova found that the death of the
growing tip of flax is not connected with boron starvation, but is the result of
poisoning by toxins formed by bacteria.
Kugushova has shown that on the roots of lucerne,
bacteria may grow which, by their excretions, cause the failing off of the
buttons (according to Berezova, 1953 a).
Inhibitors, suppressing the growth of plants and the
germination of seeds, are encountered in great numbers among actinomycetes. In
this group of microorganisms, cultures with strong herbicidal properties are
most often found among the orange A. aurantiacus, among the gray A.
griseus, and among other species and groups (Table 96).
Table 96 Effect of the culture fluid of actinomycetes on the
germination of plant seeds
|
Number of germinated seeds by % of control------>
|
beans |
corn |
clover |
lucerne |
wheat |
| A. aurantiacus, strain 1149 |
86 |
60 |
66 |
77 |
12 |
| A. aurantiacus, strain 1306 |
44 |
60 |
50 |
88 |
12 |
| A. griseus, strain 2283 |
142 |
60 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
| A. griseus, strain 293 |
86 |
120 |
83 |
111 |
100 |
| A. globisporus, strain 070 |
114 |
80 |
50 |
100 |
87 |
| Control |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
Experiments with seedlings have shown a more or less
similar picture. Some cultures of actinomycetes strongly suppress growth, while
others only slightly or not at all (Table 97).
Table 97 Effect of filtrates of actinomycetes on plant
seedlings (in length of plant parts in cm)
|
Actinomycetes |
Wheat, rootlets |
Wheat, sprouts |
Corn, rootlets |
Corn, sprouts |
Beans, rootlets |
Beans, sprouts |
| A. aurantiacus, strain 1149 |
1.5 |
2.0 |
12.0 |
7.0 |
15.0 |
13.7 |
| A. aurantiacus, strain 1306 |
1.5 |
7.5 |
0.7 |
3.5 |
1.7 |
3.8 |
| A. griseus, strain 2241 |
12.4 |
10.5 |
13.7 |
15.0 |
11.0 |
8.8 |
| Control |
14.0 |
15.0 |
15.0 |
12.0 |
18.5 |
14.0 |
Toxic substances of actinomycetes and other
microorganisms exert a suppressing effect on single isolated organs or parts of
plants; on leaves, cuttings, etc. If one immerses the cuttings, or cuts off the
leaves, then, after a certain period of time, they wither and die. By the speed
of the withering and death of these parts one may judge the strength of the
action of the toxic substances.
In our experiments we used cuttings of various
plants, of beans, peas and corn, and branches of lemon, apple, pear, and apricot
trees, etc.
If one puts on the surface of an uncut leaf a piece
of cotton which has been wetted with toxin, after a few hours spots appear of a
necrotic nature. The stronger the poison, the more sharply the necrotic spots on
the leaf are expressed. This method was used by us in testing the toxic
substances formed by microorganisms.
Among the inhibiting factors of great importance are
the phages: bacteriophages and actinophages. The studies of Rautenshtein (1955),
Khavina (1954), and certain others show that these agents are widely distributed
in soils, where they are detected in considerable numbers. There is reason to
believe that they suppress and lyse cells of bacteria or actinomycetes as
readily as under conditions of pure cultures.
For example. root-nodule bacteria become inactive
when phages multiply abundantly in the soil. Under conditions of the experiment,
they multiply to a considerable extent. We have counted tens and even hundreds
of thousands in one gram of soil. According to Demolon and Dunez (1934), phages
of root-nodule bacteria of clover and lucerne, under certain conditions,
saturate the soil to such an extent that the soil becomes much less fertile for
these plants, root-nodule bacteria do not develop in it, and there is only a
slight or no formation of nodules on their roots, and when they do develop they
have an abnormal appearance. The authors are of the opinion that the observed
clover-lucerne soil exhaustion is caused by the accumulation of phages.
According to certain data, phages penetrate the plant, and, by interfering with
plant metabolism, lower crop production (Vandecaveye and others,
1940).
There is data in the literature on the formation of
toxic substances by fungi. Leng (1949) has shown the poisoning effect of the
Penicillium fungi on the seedlings and of cereals. The most active
inhibitors in these experiments were P. notatum, and P. oxalicum.
Monnaci and Torini (1932) and Diachum (1934) note the formation of toxins by
fungi, which act on cereals under conditions of their growth in soil.
Producers of toxic substances are known among
various groups of soil microflora. An important place is occupied by
representatives of the genus Fusarium. The substances formed by them were
obtained in a chemically pure form having a known structure; for example,
lateritin, C6H46O7N2 ; avenacein,
C25H44O7N2; fructigenin,
C26H44O7N2; sambucynin,
C24H42O7N2, and enniatins,
lycomarasmin, yavanicin, etc.
These substances act differently on plants and
animals. Some of them are specific (Goiman, 1954).
Fusaria are very widespread in nature. The probably
play an important role in the toxicoses of soils. Their inhibitory effect on the
growth of plants was observed by many authors (Rehm, 1953; Laundoldt, 1952;
Sukhorukov, 1952). The significance of these fungi for the fertility of soils is
not only determined by their ability to synthesize toxins and excrete them into
the soil but also by their phytopathogenic properties.
Bilai (1955) described in his monograph many strains
of the genus Fusarium which have a deleterious effect on the germination
of seeds and on the growth of seedlings of rye, oats, and barley. The products
of their metabolism, obtained in the form of filtrates, were tested under
various conditions. The results of the author's experiments are given in Table
98.
Table 98 Effect of filtrates of Fusarium cultures on the
germination of plant seeds (in length of plant parts in cm)
|
Fungal culture |
Rye, rootlets |
Rye, sprouts |
Barley, rootlets |
Barley, sprouts |
| Control |
21.5 |
4.25 |
29.8 |
3.6 |
| Fus. poal., strain 2 |
3.8 |
1.9 |
-- |
-- |
| Fus. poal., strain 5 |
8.3 |
2.6 |
16.0 |
3.6 |
| Fus. poal., strain 9 |
11.7 |
2.5 |
11.8 |
2.3 |
| Fus. poal., strain 41 |
2.4 |
1.6 |
-- |
-- |
| Fus. poal., strain 45 |
15.0 |
5.4 |
8.4 |
1.2 |
| Fus. sporitrichioides, strain 28 |
6.1 |
1.4 |
18.4 |
2.1 |
| Fus. sporitrichioides, strain 30 |
11.3 |
3.2 |
6.0 |
1.5 |
| Fus. sporitrichioides, strain 51 |
15.3 |
6.3 |
11.2 |
1.5 |
As can be seen from the table, the filtrates of some
strains affect the seedlings of rye, while others act predominantly on the
growth of barley. Certain strains suppress the growth of rye and wheat to the
same extent as that of barley or oats.
Klechetov (192 6) in studying the phenomenon of the
flax exhaustion of soils found the growth of the fungi Fusarium,
Thielaviopsis basicola, Cladosporium herbarum, Alternaria, and
Macrosporium in these soils; these fungi, according to the author, form
toxic substances and are the reason for the death of the sown flax.
A considerable role in the exhaustion of soils and
in the lowering of plant yields is attributed in the literature to the fungi of
the genus Fusarium. Kvashina (1938), Kurtesova (1940), and Ioffe
(1950).
Kublitskaya (1955) studied the degree of the
distribution of fungi of the genus Fusarium in the soils of Central Asia
(Uzbek SSR) under grapes. She isolated 52 cultures and many of them proved to be
toxic for grapevines, causing poisoning and death to the cuttings and stock
under the conditions of growth in soil. Certain strains caused chlorosis under
experimental conditions.
Strongly expressed herbicidal properties are
exhibited by fungi of the genus Pythium. According to Likais (1952),
Pythium debaryanum forms toxins in the soil which inhibit the root
systems of plants.
Mirchink (1950) studied a large collection of fungi
isolated from turfy podsol soils of the Moscow district and found among them
many toxigenic forms. The most toxic and the most widespread fungi in these
soils are representatives of the genus Penicillium and, secondly,
Fusarium and Trichoderma. Fungi of the genus Trichoderma (T.
lignorum) and certain representatives of the genus Fusarium strongly
suppress the germination of wheat seeds, as a result of which the number of
germinating seeds decreases by 68 per cent and more. The length of sprouts in
the presence of the metabolic products of Trichoderma is 3.5 cm; in the
presence of the fungus Fusarium, 4.0 cm; and in the control, 4.6 cm. The
Penicillia inhibitors are often found in the turfy podsol soil in a great number
of species. Some of them are very toxic for wheat, which can be seen in Table 99
and in the photograph (Figure 90).
Table 99 Toxic effect of fungi of the genus Penicillium on
wheat seeds
|
Fungi |
Per cent of germinated seeds |
Mean length of sprouts, cm |
| Control (nutrient medium) |
100 |
4.6 |
| Control (water) |
100 |
4.6 |
| P. cyclopium |
0 |
-- |
| P. paxilli |
54 |
2.6 |
| P. ochro-chloron |
74 |
1.5 |
| P. martensii |
74 |
3.0 |
| P. nigricans, strain II/14 |
100 |
1.0 |
| P. nigricans, strain II/35 |
87 |
0.6 |
| P. nigricans, strain VIII/8 |
90 |
1.0 |

Figure 90. Effect of the culture fluid of the fungus Penicillium nigricans
on the germination of wheat seeds:
a--control; b--treated seeds.
Active toxin producers in soil are fungi of the
genera Trichoderma, Trichothecium, Botrytis, and others. From cultures of
Helminthosporium (H. victoriae), the toxin victorin was isolated, which
inhibits the growth of roots and seedlings of oats at a dilution of 1:1,000,000.
This substance is formed by the fungus directly in the soil (Weeler Luke, 1954;
Tyler, 1948). Toxic substances harmful to plants were found among the
representatives of Verticillium. The most well studied among them is
V. alboatrum. Its toxic substance was found by Bewley (1922), It causes
the withering of tomatoes, cotton, tobacco, and other plants. Green (1954)
discovered two substances in this fungus-- a protein and a polysaccharide. The
former is excreted into the medium and the latter enters the tissues of the
plants, The poisoning effect of this fungus was also noted by Sukhorukov (1952)
and others,
Among members of the genus Trichothecium were
found the toxic substances trichothecin and others, which inhibit plants and
certain microbes, Similar substances were found in Deuterophoma
tracheiphilus, causing "malsecco" in citrus plants, They were also
encountered in many other fungi (Hossayon, 1953; Freeman and Morrison, 1949,
Gelman 1954).
It is obvious that the importance of microbial
inhibitors in soil toxicosis will be mainly determined by the degree of their
growth and activity.
The distribution of microbial inhibitors and their
accumulation in the soil has been but occasionally studied; as were microbial
activators. Monnaci and Torni (1932) found about 60 per cent of the soil fungi
isolated and investigated by them, to be inhibitors.
According to our data, there are a great number of
inhibitors among the fungi, bacteria, and actinomycetes in soils. Out of 1,500
cultures of actinomycetes, more than 200 inhibited, to a larger or smaller
degree, the germination of beet or wheat seeds and 16 strains completely
suppressed their germination; 21 cultures strongly suppressed and 58 weakly
suppressed the growth of clover and lucerne, The total number of inhibitors
among actinomycetes is comparatively small, on the average 5-15 per
cent,
One finds inhibitors among sporiferous bacteria
considerably more often, Out of 560 strains studied, belonging mainly to three
or four species, Bac. mesentericus, Bac. subtilis, Bac. cereus, and
Bac. brevis. 178 strongly suppressed the germination of clover seeds,
more than 200 cultures suppressed to some degree the germination of peas.
According to our data, there are about 40 per cent inhibitors among the
sporiferous bacteria of Bac. mesentericus and Bac. subtilis
isolated from the turfy podsol soils.
Inhibitors among nonsporiferous bacteria are
encountered much less frequently than among sporiferous bacteria, According to
our calculations, their number can be expressed in a tenth part of one per cent.
Some species of the genus Bacterium and Pseudomonas possess,
however, strongly expressed toxic properties in relation to plants and
microorganisms.
It should be noted that certain microorganisms among
bacteria and fungi react to toxic substances in the same way as do higher
plants, which enables us to use them as test organisms in the screening for and
the study of phytotoxins. Microbial tests have a number of advantages, With them
one can more quickly determine and solve a number of problems related to the
toxicosis of the soil and the poisoning of plants, In mass studies we often use
both tests; the microbiological and the plant test.
We carried out the quantitative evaluation of
microbial inhibitors in different soils, but went into greater detail in the
turfy podsol soils of the Moscow Oblast', the Kola Peninsula, and in other
regions of the USSR. Virgin and cultivated soils, forest and swampy soils,
meadows, ate were investigated,
We counted from 5,000 to 450,000 inhibitors in one
gram of soil depending on the properties of the latter (Table 100). In slightly
cultivated soils, the absolute number of inhibitors is smaller, but its
percentage may be higher than in wellcultivated soils.
Table 100 Number of inhibitors in podsol soils of Moscow
area (Number of cells in 1 g of soil)
|
Soil |
Bacteria inhibiting azotobacter |
Actino- mycetes inhibiting azotobacter |
Fungi inhibiting azotobacter |
Bacteria inhibiting beet seedlings |
Actino- mycetes inhibiting beet seedlings |
Fungi inhibiting beet seedlings |
|
Dolgoprodnoe |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Virgin soil |
15,000 |
23,000 |
1,300 |
8,000 |
3,000 |
500 |
| Plowed fields |
45,000 |
17,000 |
2,000 |
15,000 |
7,000 |
1,000 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Agricultural Academy Timiryazev |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Forest |
40,000 |
80,000 |
17,000 |
25,000 |
10,000 |
4,000 |
| Virgin soil |
10,000 |
32,000 |
1,500 |
10,000 |
3,000 |
500 |
| Plowed fields |
120,000 |
150,000 |
2,300 |
50,000 |
35,000 |
3,000 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chashnikovo |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Forest |
120,000 |
82,000 |
12,000 |
20,000 |
12,000 |
7,000 |
| Virgin soil |
40,000 |
16,000 |
1,600 |
10,000 |
5,000 |
1,000 |
| Plowed fields |
450,000 |
160,000 |
1,400 |
150,000 |
60,000 |
500 |
Inhibitors which suppress the growth of
Azotobacter in podsol soils are much more numerous than microbes which
suppress plant growth. Mirchink (1958) studied the fungal flora of soils of the
experimental station Chashnikovo (Moscow Oblast') and found that 11-38% were
inhibitors which suppress plant growth. They were distributed in the following
manner: in forest soil--13%, in glades--11%, in cultivated soils, 15-38% of the
total microflora, detected by by existing methods (Table 101).
Table 101 Number of fungi in podsol soils (thousands in 1 g of
soil)
|
Soils |
Total |
Inhibitors, % |
| Control soils without fertilizers |
60 |
32 |
| Fertilized with mineral nitrogen |
138 |
38 |
| Calcium-containing fertilizers + manure |
36 |
24 |
| Calcium-containing fertilizers + manure + P.K. |
18 |
15 |
As can be seen from the data given, the greatest
number of inhibitors was found in soils cultivated to a limited extent. Mineral
fertilizers do not diminish but, on the contrary, they noticeably increase the
content of inhibitors.
It was experimentally established that microbial
inhibitors form toxic substances directly in the soil in which they
grow.
If these organisms are introduced into nontoxic or
inactivated soil and the soil is incubated under certain conditions of humidity
and temperature, then after a certain time it will become toxic for these or
other plants or for certain species of microorganisms, depending on the
peculiarities of the inhibitor.
Rybalkina (1938 a) observed the appearance of
toxicosis in flax-exhausted soil upon growth of the fungus (Fusarium
lini).
Mirchink (1956) incubated soil (podsol) with
fungi-inhibitors and she observed the appearance of toxicosis. In soils in which
the fungus Penicillium cyclopium grew abundantly if artificially
introduced, seeds of wheat did not germinate at all or germinated in small
numbers (Figure 91). Other species of fungi isolated from podsol soils also
poisoned the soil but to a lesser degree. On such soils germinating wheat
seedlings constituted 15-60% of the number of seedlings in normal control
soil.

Figure 91. Poisoning of soil by cultures of fungi upon artificial
infection. Germination of wheat seeds:
a--in control (noninfected) soil; b--in soil in which Penicillium
nigricans grew; c--in soil infected with Penicillium cyclopium.
Clover-exhausted soil inactivated by heating regains
its toxicity by growing the appropriate microbial inhibitors in it. In such soil
with regenerated toxicity, clover and root nodule bacteria grew much more poorly
than in normal soil. There was either no nodule formation on the root of clover
or it was considerably suppressed (Table 102). Root-nodule bacteria in such soil
became avirulent and lost the capacity to penetrate the roots and form nodules
in them. Cultures of some fungi of the genera Penicillium, Fusarium,
Trichoderma and some sporeforming bacteria, when growing abundantly in
inactivated forest or field soil restored the soil's original toxicity in
relation to wheat and Azotobacter (Table 103).
Table 102 Growth of clover on soil with restored
toxicity
|
Expermiental conditions |
Number of sproutings |
Number of sprouts on the 30th day |
Number of nodules per plant (average) |
| Inactivated soil not infected with inhibitors (control) |
46 |
46 |
23 |
| Inactivated soil, infected with inhibitors: |
|
|
|
| Ps. pyocyanea |
32 |
26 |
0.05 |
| Ps. tumefaciens |
39 |
22 |
0.0 |
| Fusarium sp. |
41 |
31 |
0.5 |
| Mixture of all bacteria |
30 |
19 |
0.0 |
Note: Each vessel contained 50 seeds. Inoculation was
performed with active cultures of Rhizobium
trifolii.
Table 103 Accumulation of toxic substances in podsol soil an a
result of growth of inhibitors
|
Name of inhibitor |
Length of wheat rootlets, cm |
Length of wheat sprouts, cm |
Survival of Azotobacter cells, hours |
| Control: inactivated soil (not infected) |
12 |
8 |
240 |
| Infected with: |
|
|
|
| Bacillus strain 12 |
3 |
5 |
6 |
| Bacillus strain 23 |
6 |
2 |
12 |
| Bacillus strain 8 |
4 |
4 |
16 |
Toxins produced by inhibitors may, under certain
conditions, accumulate in considerable quantities and endow the soil with toxic
properties. The extent of accumulation of toxic substances depends upon the
intensity of their formation by microorganisms, the rate of destruction and
leaching, and also upon the degree of adsorption.
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