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  2002 Table of Contents

Impacts and Management of Soil Acidity under Direct Seed Systems
- Effects on Soilborne Crop Pathogens

Timothy C. Paulitz
USDA-ARS, Root Disease and Biological Control Lab, Pullman, WA 99164-6430

Soil pH can have an enormous influence on the outcome of soilborne diseases caused by crop pathogens. Some soilborne pathogens have been successfully controlled by the management of soil pH. For example, clubroot of crucifers has been controlled by liming the soil to above pH 5.7. At pH 7.8, the disease is completely checked. On the other hand, common scab of potato, caused by the actinomycete Streptomyces, can be controlled by dropping the pH of the soil below 5.2. Unfortunately, none of the soilborne pathogens of direct-seeded wheat and barley can be controlled to this extent by manipulating soil pH, nor would it be economical or wise to attempt these changes on the large acreages of cereals in the Pacific Northwest. However, cropping practices such as fertilization (the form of N) and lack of tillage will have a direct influence on soil pH. This shift in soil pH may have more subtle effects on diseases in direct-seeded crops that must be considered in any management plan.

The form of nitrogen affects soil pH in two major ways. First, the addition of ammonium forms of N tends to acidify the soil. This is due to nitrification- the oxidation of NH4+ (ammonium) to NO3- (nitrate) by soil bacteria, forming energy and H+ ions that acidify the soil. However, the form of N may also affect the pH around the root, to which the pathogen is exposed when infecting the root. This zone of soil around the root is called the rhizosphere, and from the disease perspective, this soil is more important than the bulk soil away from the root. When a plant root takes up NH4+ ions, it excretes H+ ions back to balance charges, thus acidifying the zone around the root. When a root takes up NO3-, it excretes OH- ions, making the root zone more alkaline.

Direct seeding may have two direct effects on soil pH. Because the soil is not tilled, the acidification caused by fertilizer application in the top soil layers is not diluted out by mixing with the more alkaline soil below the fertilizer zone. Thus, soil pH in the top soil layers may decrease more in direct-seeded crops compared to conventionally-tilled, at least until the buffering capacity of the plow layer is reached. On the other hand, soil organic matter increases in direct-seeded crops over time. This increases the cation exchange capacity of the soil, buffering the soil by binding H+ to the negatively charged OH and COOH groups on the organic matter. NH4+ ions will also bind to organic matter, reducing acidification by nitrification. However, the long-term outcome of soil pH in direct seeded crops in the PNW is still unclear, and probably depends on the buffering capacity of the parent soil.

How does soil pH affect diseases? Remember that disease is the outcome of three interacting components- the pathogen, the plant, and the environment. Soil pH can indirectly affect diseases by affecting any one of these components. Root diseases are caused by microscopic soilborne fungi. These organisms form a network of tiny threads, which can grow through the soil and infect plant roots. Fungi absorb food as simple molecules from organic matter or living plants. These molecules must be transported across the membrane from the outside to the inside of the cell. The fungus expends energy and uses a proton pump to transport many of these molecules across the membrane by maintaining a proton (H+) gradient. The external pH (proton concentration) can affect its ability to take up food. But, in general, only extremes of pH (greater than 7 or less than 5) reduce the growth of most fungi. Put another way- at the pH of most agriculture soils, most fungi are not pH limited in terms of growth. However, pH may influence the availability of trace nutrients such as iron, zinc or manganezse in the same way as its availability to plants is affected. Thus, fungi must work harder to get these less available nutrients.

Soil pH will also affect the host plant. If the pH is too extreme, the plant will be stressed and may be less resistant to attack by the pathogen. Soil pH may affect the composition of the root exudates, which attract the soil borne pathogen. Soil pH will also affect the availability of nutrients to the plant. Some of these nutrients may be needed for strong cell walls and resistance to fungi. For example, high levels of available calcium in more alkaline soils have been implicated in the resistance to root diseases caused by Pythium.

Finally, pH may affect the microbial populations that may hold the pathogens in check. It is well known that fungi are more active in more acid soils, while bacteria are not as adapted to these conditions. Trichoderma, a biocontrol fungus, prefers acid soils. Fluorescent pseudomonads, bacteria that have been implicated in soils suppressive to take-all, prefer more neutral pH soils. Thus, by shifting soil pH, a natural suppressiveness may be enhanced or destroyed.

In this paper, I will address six major diseases of wheat and barley, all caused by soilborne fungi. In some cases, there is research showing clear-cut evidence for a pH effect, but in other cases, the research is lacking. Because of the link between type of N fertilizer and pH, I will also discuss research on ammonium vs. nitrate fertilizers. With all root diseases, proper placement of N is also important, to enable the seedling to quickly gain access to the fertilizer and overcome the lack of absorbtive capacity caused by a lack of roots.

Take-all- (Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici). With this disease, the evidence is strong that take-all is more severe in alkaline than in acid soils, and that disease is reduced when ammonium forms of N are applied, as opposed to nitrate forms. (Huber and Watson, 1971, Smiley et al. 1973, MacNish, 1980, MacNish, 1988). In longer-term experiments in Australia at three different sites over 11 years, less take-all was found in plots fertilized with ammonium sulfate as aopposed to sodium nitrate. This effect is related to the pH of the rhizosphere. Smiley and Cook (1973) found the disease greatly reduced when the rhizosphere pH was below 6.6, but the correlation with bulk soil pH was poor. The rhizosphere pH was 5.5 for wheat supplied with ammonium nitrogen was 5.5, compared to 7.5 for plants supplied with nitrate. The best control occurred with ammonium sulfate, and the addition of lime negated the control. Take-all decline, a natural suppressiveness associated with wheat monoculture, takes longer to establish in more alkaline soils (Cook and Baker, 1983).

Rhizoctonia bare patch and root rot (Rhizoctonia solani AG-8). There is not much information on the effect of N or pH on Rhizoctonia root rots of cereals. Most studies on Rhizoctonia root rots of broad leaf crops have shown that NO3-N results in less disease compared to NH4-N fertilizers (Huber and Watson, 1974). The same effect was seen on sharp eyespot of wheat, caused by R. cerealis. MacNish, an Australian pathologist, looked at the effects of N application on bare patch in conventional and direct-seeded wheat. He found that cultivation reduced bare patch, something that has been shown by other researchers. But the application of N also reduced bare patch in zero-tilled soil., and ammonium sulfate resulted in patch development than sodium nitrate (MacNish, 1985). However, research by Pumphrey et al. (1987) in Pendleton found that N application and timing of application had no effect on bare patch. They used ammonium sulfate at planting and ammonium nitrate at late tillering.

Smiley et al. (1996) did a 3-year study in the long-term plots at Pendleton, looking at different rotations, tillage and burning. In the wheat-fallow, they found that application of N increased the incidence of Rhizoctonia root rot. They applied, 0, 40, or 80 lbs/acre and found more disease at 40, compared to 80 lbs/acre. MacNish (1988), in long-term cropping systems study in Australia, found that N application had no effect on Rhizoctonia root rot. It is interesting that the ammonium reduced soil pH at all sites, but that Rhizoctonia declined to almost nothing after 7-9 years of continuous wheat cropping. This may be a case of development of natural suppressiveness developing. In a closely related disease on turfgrass, brown patch caused by R. solani, plots that received urea generally had less disease than the nitrate-treated plots (Fidanza and Dernoeden, 1996a). Low soil pH was weakly correlated with lower disease levels in one trial in 1993. This may be due to the sulfur acidifying the soil, rather than acidification from the ammonium. But in other trials (Fidanza and Dernoeden, 1996b), there was no correlation with soil pH. The take-home message seems to be lots of conflicting information with no rule of thumb. The effect of fertilizer type and soil pH do not appear to be major for this disease, unlike for take-all and Fusarium crown rot. However, the effect may be very site specific. There is no literature on the effect of pH on R. oryzae, which is widespread in eastern Washington (Paulitz, unpublished).

Pythium seedling and root rot- (Pythium spp). Pythium is another disease on which there is not much literature on pH effects in the field. There have been some studies in the lab, showing that at pH 4.8, fewer zoospores attach to the root than at pH 6.0. (Huyang and Tu, 1998). Pythium produces motile spores that can swim through wet soil and attach to the root to infect it. The most detailed study with relevance to the Pacific Northwest was done by a student of R. J. Cook's in the early 90s (Fukui et al. 1994). He looked at the disease-producing activity of different inoculum levels of P. ultimum, in both pasteurized and natural soils. He adjusted the pH of the natural soils to 4.3-7.6 with sulfuric acid or lime. The optimum disease activity was from pH 5.0-5.5. There was a slight decline in disease from pH 5.5 to 6.5, but above pH 6.5, the disease activity dropped significantly. In one soil where the pH was decreased to 4.3, disease also declined significantly. The take-home message on Pythium and pH is probably similar to Rhizoctonia- in the pH ranges of our soils, Pythium is not limited. In fact, Pythium has optimal activity at the pH ranges of soil that are acidified by ammonium fertilizers. The literature on N effects on Pythium is also limited. Most of the work has been done with the use of organic amendments to suppress Pythium. Pythium is very sensitive to microbial competition, and organic amendments often increase microbial activity in the soil. Smiley et al. (1996) found Pythium root rot was more prevalent in sites with inorganic N fertilizers, as opposed to those fertilized with cow manure or pea vines.

Fusarium foot rot or crown rot (Fusarium pseudograminearum and F. culmorum). Most growers are well aware that this disease is favored by increased nitrogen fertilization and drought stress. The effect of the type of N on this disease is well-known, based on work done by Cook and Pappendick in the early 70s. Applications of NH4-N increase disease severity and incidence, while NO3-N fertilizers decrease the disease (Smiley et al. 1972). This is similar to Fusarium wilt diseases, which are suppressed by alkaline soils and nitrate fertilizers (Nelson et al.1981). Smiley et al. (1996) also found a strong correlation between crown rot and N application, and the disease was inversely proportional to soil pH, at least in the range measured (4.3 to 5.3).

Cephalosporium stripe (Cephalosporium gramineum) This is a disease where soil pH has a dramatic influence. This soilborne vascular pathogen is more damaging in acid soils with high moisture. It produces single-celled spores that infect roots wounded by winter freezing and soil heaving. In a series of studies by Tim Murray at WSU, he showed that the germination of spores is not affected by pH (Blank and Murray, 1998), but the production of spores on wheat straw buried in the soil was greater at acid pH (Murray and Walter, 1991). Disease increased 5-fold when soil pH decreased from 7.5 to 4.5. The isolation of the pathogen from crown roots was greaterless at pH 6.7 to 7.2 than at pH 4.7 to 5.9 (Stiles and Murray, 1996). Liming the soil to increase soil pH from 5.1-5.3 to >6.0 decreased this disease two out of four years, and there was a significant correlation between soil pH and infected stems (Murray et al. 1992).

Eyespot of wheat (Pseudocercosporella herpotrichoides). Only one study has been done on the effect of N and pH on this disease, with trends similar to that of Fusarium crown rot. In a study on winter wheat on wheat-fallow, eyespot incidence increased 2-3 fold when 160 lbs/acre of N was applied, compared to the non-fertilized plot (Smiley et al. 1996). This can be explained by the enhanced canopy growth, like planting early, which is well known to favor eyespot foot rot of wheat.

Conclusions

In conclusion, diseases caused by soilborne pathogens of wheat and barley can be classified into two groups- those that are not influenced greatly by pH or type of nitrogen fertilizer, and those that are. The first group includes the root rotting pathogens Pythium and Rhizoctonia. These are considered to be generalist types of pathogens that quickly kill and rot the plant tissue. The second group includes the crown rotting pathogens Fusarium and Gaeumannomyces (take-all). These initially infect and colonize the root without causing massive tissue death, and later move into the crown when the plant is older. These two diseases show opposite trends- take-all is reduced under acid conditions, while Fusarium crown rot seems to be increased. One could speculate that increased soil acidification may increase the risk of Fusarium crown rot, although N levels and drought stress are probably stronger risk factors. One can also speculate that liming the soil will increase take-all. Cephalosporum stripe, a vascular disease, is also influenced by pH and N, similar to many other vascular diseases. Liming the soil will decrease the severity of this disease. Thus, the risk of soilborne pathogens in wheat and barley may be influenced by the potential shift of soil pH in direct-seeded systems, with the different mix of diseases depending on the degree and direction of the pH shift in response to the form of nitrogen, accumulation of organic matter, and whether lime is used.

References

Blank, C. A. and Murray, T. D. 1998. Influence of pH and matric potential on germination of Cephalosporium gramineum conidia. Plant Dis. 82: 975-978.

Cook, R. J. and Baker, K. F. 1983. The Nature and Practice of Biological Control of Plant Pathogens. APS Press, St. Paul, MN.

Fidanza, M. A. and Dornoeden, P. H. 1996a. Brown patch severity in perennial ryegrass as influenced by irrigation, fungicide, and fertilizers. Crop Sci. 36: 1631-1638.

Fidanza, M. A. and Dornoeden, P. H. 1996b. Influence of mowing height, nitrogen source, and ipridione on brown patch severity in perennial ryegrass. Crop Sci. 36: 1620-1630.

Huang, R. and Tu, J. C. 1998. Effects of hydrogen ion concentration and temperature on attachment of zoospores of Pythium aphanidermatum to tomato roots. Mededelingen- Fac. Landbouwk. Univ. Gent 63: 855-859.

Huber, D. M. and Watson, R. D. 1974. Nitrogen form and plant disease. Annu. Rev. Phytopathology 12:139-165.

MacNish, G. C. 1980. Management of cereals for control of take-all. Journal of Agriculture, Western Australia 21: 15-19.

MacNish, G. C. 1988. Changes in take-all (Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici), rhizoctonia root rot (Rhizoctonia solani) and soil pH in continuous wheat with annual applications of nitrogenous fertilizer in Western Australia. Aust. J. Experimental Agricult. 28: 333-341.

MacNish, G. C. 1985. Methods of reducing rhizoctonia patch of cereals in Western Australia. Plant Pathology 34: 175-181.

Murray, T. D. and Walter, C. C. 1991. Influence of pH and matric potential on sporulation of Cephalosporium gramineum. Phytopathol. 81: 79-84.

Murray, T. D., Walter, C. C. and Anderegg, J. C. 1992. Control of Cephalosporium stripe of winter wheat by liming. Plant Dis. 76: 282-286.

Nelson, P. E. Toussoun, T. A. and Cook, R. J. 1981. Fusarium: Disease, Biology, and Taxonomy. Penn. State Univ., University Park, PA.

Pumphrey, F. V., Wilkins, D. E., Hane, D. C. and Smiley, R. W. 1987. Influence of tillage and nitrogen fertilizer on Rhizoctonia root rot (bare patch) of winter wheat. Plant Disease 71: 125-127.

Smiley, R. W. and Cook, R. J. 1973. Relationship between take-all of wheat and rhizosphere pH in soils fertilized with ammonium vs. nitrate-nitrogen. Phytopathology 63: 882-890.

Smiley, R. W., Collins, H. P. and Rasmussen, P. E. 1996. Diseases of wheat in long-term agronomic experiments at Pendleton, Oregon. Plant Dis. 80: 813-820.

Smiley, R. W., Cook, R. J. and Pappendick, R. I. 1972. Fusarium foot rot of wheat and peas as influenced by soil application of anhydrous ammonia and ammonia potassium azide solutions. Phytopath. 62: 86-91.

Stiles, C. M. and Murray, T. D. 1996. Infection of field-grown winter wheat by Cephalosporium gramineum and the effect of soil pH. Phytopathol. 86: 177-183.

     
 

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