New finding of Trichoderma asperellum in decreasing soil N 2 O emission

Hong-sheng Wu,Su-yun Chen, Jun Ding,Wei Tian, Ti-jian Wang,Li-dong Shen,Yan-hui Li, Zheng Liu,Ji Li

Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture(2022)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Background Global warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions affects sustainable human development. Agricultural practices are important source of greenhouse gases (GHG). Nitrous oxide (N 2 O) contributes greatly to farming GHG. It is important to find a potential and practical biological technique that mitigate N 2 O emissions in an environment friendly way. Methods N 2 O-inhibiting fungi were isolated and identified in the lab. The fungi were added into the soil and placed in the incubator and interval gas sampling was analyzed by gas chromatograph. Results Fungus coding Z17 was identified molecularly with the same evolutionary branch on the phylogenetic tree with Trichoderma asperellum by BLAST comparison on NCBI GenBank. In the lab simulation, the N 2 O emission flux was decreased by 28.18–47.16% by inoculating Trichoderma asperellum with 10 6 cfu·g −1 , 5 × 10 6 cfu·g −1 and 10 7 cfu·g −1 fungal spores in the soil compared to the control. Conclusions The N 2 O-inhibiting fungus Z17 was identified as Trichoderma asperellum , capable of suppressing N 2 O emissions from soil with at least 10 6 CFU·g −1 soil. The best N 2 O-inhibiting effect was on day 9 of inoculation into soil because most of the fungal numbers were present in soil. Graphical Abstract
更多
查看译文
关键词
Fungal nitrification inhibitor,Greenhouse gases,Carbon neutralization,Trichoderma asperellum,18S rDNA
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要