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Bio-pesticides: Harmful or harmless to ammonia oxidizing microorganisms? The case of a Paecilomyces lilacinus-based nematicide

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Auteur
Rousidou, C.; Papadopoulou, E. S.; Kortsinidou, M.; Giannakou, I. O.; Singh, B. K.; Menkissoglu-Spiroudi, U.; Karpouzas, D. G.
Date
2013
DOI
10.1016/j.soilbio.2013.08.014
Sujet
BIOACT (R)
Paecilomyces lilacinus strain 251
Ammonia oxidizing
bacteria
Ammonia oxidizing archaea
Bio-pesticides
Pesticides soil
microbial toxicity
COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
PAECILOTOXIN PRODUCTION
BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES
MELOIDOGYNE-INCOGNITA
MICROBIAL COMMUNITY
MYCORRHIZAL FUNGUS
AGRICULTURAL SOIL
ARCHAEA
IMPACT
NITRIFICATION
Soil Science
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Résumé
Bio-pesticides are considered as low-risk compounds, a belief mainly based on their natural origin rather than on experimental evidence. Thus there is a need to explore the ecotoxicity of bio-pesticides and mostly their impact on soil microbes which is largely unknown. The effect of Quillajia saponaria plant extract (QLAgri (R)) and Paecilomyces lilacinus strain 251 (PL251, BIOACT (R)) on the microbial community was investigated comparatively to the synthetic nematicides oxamyl and fluensulfone. Particular attention was given to potential effects on ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and archaea (AOA). No effect of QLAgri (R), oxamyl and fluensulfone on the soil microbial community and AOB/AOA was observed. In contrast BIOACT (R) stimulated the growth of copiotrophic Gram negative bacteria and fungi as determined by phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) analysis. Terminal restriction fragments length polymorphism (TRFLP) and qPCR analysis of the amoA gene showed a significant time-dependent inhibitory effect of BIOACT (R) on the abundance of AOB/AOA up to 20 days post application. Further qPCR analysis indicated that PL251 did not proliferate in soil. These results suggested the establishment of complex interactions between BIOACT (R) and AOB/AOA which were further explored. In a follow-up study BIOACT (R) and its co-formulants, glucose (78%) and skimmed milk powder (6%), both induced a transient inhibitory effect on potential nitrification and abundance of AOB/AOA, whereas no effect was seen when PL251 spores were used. Overall, our data suggest that the transient effect of BIOACT (R) on nitrifiers was the result of a competitive exclusion by copiotrophic microorganisms feeding on co-formulants rather than a direct toxicity effect. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/32705
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