Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils. / Thonar, Cécile; Lekfeldt, Jonas Duus Stevens; Cozzolino, Vincenza; Kundel, Dominika; Kulhánek, Martin; Mosimann, Carla; Neumann, Günter; Piccolo, Alessandro; Rex, Martin; Symanczik, Sarah; Walder, Florian; Weinmann, Markus; de Neergaard, Andreas; Mäder, Paul.

In: Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture, Vol. 4, No. 1, 7, 2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Thonar, C, Lekfeldt, JDS, Cozzolino, V, Kundel, D, Kulhánek, M, Mosimann, C, Neumann, G, Piccolo, A, Rex, M, Symanczik, S, Walder, F, Weinmann, M, de Neergaard, A & Mäder, P 2017, 'Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils', Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture, vol. 4, no. 1, 7. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40538-017-0088-6

APA

Thonar, C., Lekfeldt, J. D. S., Cozzolino, V., Kundel, D., Kulhánek, M., Mosimann, C., Neumann, G., Piccolo, A., Rex, M., Symanczik, S., Walder, F., Weinmann, M., de Neergaard, A., & Mäder, P. (2017). Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils. Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture, 4(1), [7]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40538-017-0088-6

Vancouver

Thonar C, Lekfeldt JDS, Cozzolino V, Kundel D, Kulhánek M, Mosimann C et al. Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils. Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture. 2017;4(1). 7. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40538-017-0088-6

Author

Thonar, Cécile ; Lekfeldt, Jonas Duus Stevens ; Cozzolino, Vincenza ; Kundel, Dominika ; Kulhánek, Martin ; Mosimann, Carla ; Neumann, Günter ; Piccolo, Alessandro ; Rex, Martin ; Symanczik, Sarah ; Walder, Florian ; Weinmann, Markus ; de Neergaard, Andreas ; Mäder, Paul. / Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils. In: Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture. 2017 ; Vol. 4, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{30c77adb8d90452e94d8f7d97b225d57,
title = "Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils",
abstract = "Background: Agricultural production is challenged by the limitation of non-renewable resources. Alternative fertilizers are promoted but they often have a lower availability of key macronutrients, especially phosphorus (P). Biological inoculants, the so-called bio-effectors (BEs), may be combined with these fertilizers to improve the nutrient use efficiency. Methods: The goal of this study was to assess the potential of three BEs in combination with alternative fertilizers (e.g., composted manure, biogas digestate, green compost) to promote plant growth and nutrient uptake in soils typical for various European regions. Pot experiments were conducted in Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Italy, and Switzerland where the same variety of maize was grown in local soils deficient in P in combination with alternative fertilizers and the same set of BEs (Trichoderma, Pseudomonas, and Bacillus strains). Common guidelines for pot experiment implementation and performance were developed to allow data comparison, and soils were analyzed by the same laboratory. Results: Efficiency of BEs to improve maize growth and nutrient uptake differed strongly according to soil properties and fertilizer combined. Promising results were mostly obtained with BEs in combination with organic fertilizers such as composted animal manures, fresh digestate of organic wastes, and sewage sludge. In only one experiment, the nutrient use efficiency of mineral recycling fertilizers was improved by BE inoculation. Conclusions: These BE effects are to a large extent due to improved root growth and P mobilization via accelerated mineralization.",
keywords = "Bacillus, Bio-effector, Bio-inoculants, Biofector, Maize, Organic fertilizer, PGPR, Phosphorus, Pseudomonas, Recycling fertilizer, Trichoderma",
author = "C{\'e}cile Thonar and Lekfeldt, {Jonas Duus Stevens} and Vincenza Cozzolino and Dominika Kundel and Martin Kulh{\'a}nek and Carla Mosimann and G{\"u}nter Neumann and Alessandro Piccolo and Martin Rex and Sarah Symanczik and Florian Walder and Markus Weinmann and {de Neergaard}, Andreas and Paul M{\"a}der",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1186/s40538-017-0088-6",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
journal = "Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture",
issn = "2196-5641",
publisher = "SpringerOpen",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Potential of three microbial bio-effectors to promote maize growth and nutrient acquisition from alternative phosphorous fertilizers in contrasting soils

AU - Thonar, Cécile

AU - Lekfeldt, Jonas Duus Stevens

AU - Cozzolino, Vincenza

AU - Kundel, Dominika

AU - Kulhánek, Martin

AU - Mosimann, Carla

AU - Neumann, Günter

AU - Piccolo, Alessandro

AU - Rex, Martin

AU - Symanczik, Sarah

AU - Walder, Florian

AU - Weinmann, Markus

AU - de Neergaard, Andreas

AU - Mäder, Paul

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Background: Agricultural production is challenged by the limitation of non-renewable resources. Alternative fertilizers are promoted but they often have a lower availability of key macronutrients, especially phosphorus (P). Biological inoculants, the so-called bio-effectors (BEs), may be combined with these fertilizers to improve the nutrient use efficiency. Methods: The goal of this study was to assess the potential of three BEs in combination with alternative fertilizers (e.g., composted manure, biogas digestate, green compost) to promote plant growth and nutrient uptake in soils typical for various European regions. Pot experiments were conducted in Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Italy, and Switzerland where the same variety of maize was grown in local soils deficient in P in combination with alternative fertilizers and the same set of BEs (Trichoderma, Pseudomonas, and Bacillus strains). Common guidelines for pot experiment implementation and performance were developed to allow data comparison, and soils were analyzed by the same laboratory. Results: Efficiency of BEs to improve maize growth and nutrient uptake differed strongly according to soil properties and fertilizer combined. Promising results were mostly obtained with BEs in combination with organic fertilizers such as composted animal manures, fresh digestate of organic wastes, and sewage sludge. In only one experiment, the nutrient use efficiency of mineral recycling fertilizers was improved by BE inoculation. Conclusions: These BE effects are to a large extent due to improved root growth and P mobilization via accelerated mineralization.

AB - Background: Agricultural production is challenged by the limitation of non-renewable resources. Alternative fertilizers are promoted but they often have a lower availability of key macronutrients, especially phosphorus (P). Biological inoculants, the so-called bio-effectors (BEs), may be combined with these fertilizers to improve the nutrient use efficiency. Methods: The goal of this study was to assess the potential of three BEs in combination with alternative fertilizers (e.g., composted manure, biogas digestate, green compost) to promote plant growth and nutrient uptake in soils typical for various European regions. Pot experiments were conducted in Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Italy, and Switzerland where the same variety of maize was grown in local soils deficient in P in combination with alternative fertilizers and the same set of BEs (Trichoderma, Pseudomonas, and Bacillus strains). Common guidelines for pot experiment implementation and performance were developed to allow data comparison, and soils were analyzed by the same laboratory. Results: Efficiency of BEs to improve maize growth and nutrient uptake differed strongly according to soil properties and fertilizer combined. Promising results were mostly obtained with BEs in combination with organic fertilizers such as composted animal manures, fresh digestate of organic wastes, and sewage sludge. In only one experiment, the nutrient use efficiency of mineral recycling fertilizers was improved by BE inoculation. Conclusions: These BE effects are to a large extent due to improved root growth and P mobilization via accelerated mineralization.

KW - Bacillus

KW - Bio-effector

KW - Bio-inoculants

KW - Biofector

KW - Maize

KW - Organic fertilizer

KW - PGPR

KW - Phosphorus

KW - Pseudomonas

KW - Recycling fertilizer

KW - Trichoderma

U2 - 10.1186/s40538-017-0088-6

DO - 10.1186/s40538-017-0088-6

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85032721063

VL - 4

JO - Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture

JF - Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture

SN - 2196-5641

IS - 1

M1 - 7

ER -

ID: 193504463