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Resistance and resilience responses of a range of soil eukaryote and bacterial taxa to fungicide application

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Resistance and resilience responses of a range of soil eukaryote and bacterial taxa to fungicide application. / Howell, Christopher C.; Hilton, Sally; Semple, Kirk T. et al.
In: Chemosphere, Vol. 112, 10.2014, p. 194-202.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Howell CC, Hilton S, Semple KT, Bending GD. Resistance and resilience responses of a range of soil eukaryote and bacterial taxa to fungicide application. Chemosphere. 2014 Oct;112:194-202. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.03.031

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Howell, Christopher C. ; Hilton, Sally ; Semple, Kirk T. et al. / Resistance and resilience responses of a range of soil eukaryote and bacterial taxa to fungicide application. In: Chemosphere. 2014 ; Vol. 112. pp. 194-202.

Bibtex

@article{29d082aa93ce47de956b59835f550aec,
title = "Resistance and resilience responses of a range of soil eukaryote and bacterial taxa to fungicide application",
abstract = "The application of plant protection products has the potential to significantly affect soil microbial community structure and function. However, the extent to which soil microbial communities from different trophic levels exhibit resistance and resilience to such compounds remains poorly understood. The resistance and resilience responses of a range of microbial communities (bacteria, fungi, archaea, pseudomonads, and nematodes) to different concentrations of the strobilurin fungicide, azoxystrobin were studied. A significant concentration-dependent decrease, and subsequent recovery in soil dehydrogenase activity was recorded, but no significant impact on total microbial biomass was observed. Impacts on specific microbial communities were studied using small subunit (SSU) rRNA terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) profiling using soil DNA and RNA. The application of azoxystrobin significantly affected fungal and nematode community structure and diversity but had no impact on other communities. Community impacts were more pronounced in the RNA-derived T-RFLP profiles than in the DNA-derived profiles. qPCR confirmed that azoxystrobin application significantly reduced fungal, but not bacterial, SSU rRNA gene copy number. Azoxystrobin application reduced the prevalence of ascomycete fungi, but increased the relative abundance of zygomycetes. Azoxystrobin amendment also reduced the relative abundance of nematodes in the order Enoplia, but stimulated a large increase in the relative abundance of nematodes from the order Araeolaimida.",
keywords = "Resistance, Resilience, Azoxystrobin, T-RFLP",
author = "Howell, {Christopher C.} and Sally Hilton and Semple, {Kirk T.} and Bending, {Gary D.}",
year = "2014",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.03.031",
language = "English",
volume = "112",
pages = "194--202",
journal = "Chemosphere",
publisher = "NLM (Medline)",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Resistance and resilience responses of a range of soil eukaryote and bacterial taxa to fungicide application

AU - Howell, Christopher C.

AU - Hilton, Sally

AU - Semple, Kirk T.

AU - Bending, Gary D.

PY - 2014/10

Y1 - 2014/10

N2 - The application of plant protection products has the potential to significantly affect soil microbial community structure and function. However, the extent to which soil microbial communities from different trophic levels exhibit resistance and resilience to such compounds remains poorly understood. The resistance and resilience responses of a range of microbial communities (bacteria, fungi, archaea, pseudomonads, and nematodes) to different concentrations of the strobilurin fungicide, azoxystrobin were studied. A significant concentration-dependent decrease, and subsequent recovery in soil dehydrogenase activity was recorded, but no significant impact on total microbial biomass was observed. Impacts on specific microbial communities were studied using small subunit (SSU) rRNA terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) profiling using soil DNA and RNA. The application of azoxystrobin significantly affected fungal and nematode community structure and diversity but had no impact on other communities. Community impacts were more pronounced in the RNA-derived T-RFLP profiles than in the DNA-derived profiles. qPCR confirmed that azoxystrobin application significantly reduced fungal, but not bacterial, SSU rRNA gene copy number. Azoxystrobin application reduced the prevalence of ascomycete fungi, but increased the relative abundance of zygomycetes. Azoxystrobin amendment also reduced the relative abundance of nematodes in the order Enoplia, but stimulated a large increase in the relative abundance of nematodes from the order Araeolaimida.

AB - The application of plant protection products has the potential to significantly affect soil microbial community structure and function. However, the extent to which soil microbial communities from different trophic levels exhibit resistance and resilience to such compounds remains poorly understood. The resistance and resilience responses of a range of microbial communities (bacteria, fungi, archaea, pseudomonads, and nematodes) to different concentrations of the strobilurin fungicide, azoxystrobin were studied. A significant concentration-dependent decrease, and subsequent recovery in soil dehydrogenase activity was recorded, but no significant impact on total microbial biomass was observed. Impacts on specific microbial communities were studied using small subunit (SSU) rRNA terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) profiling using soil DNA and RNA. The application of azoxystrobin significantly affected fungal and nematode community structure and diversity but had no impact on other communities. Community impacts were more pronounced in the RNA-derived T-RFLP profiles than in the DNA-derived profiles. qPCR confirmed that azoxystrobin application significantly reduced fungal, but not bacterial, SSU rRNA gene copy number. Azoxystrobin application reduced the prevalence of ascomycete fungi, but increased the relative abundance of zygomycetes. Azoxystrobin amendment also reduced the relative abundance of nematodes in the order Enoplia, but stimulated a large increase in the relative abundance of nematodes from the order Araeolaimida.

KW - Resistance

KW - Resilience

KW - Azoxystrobin

KW - T-RFLP

U2 - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.03.031

DO - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.03.031

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25048906

VL - 112

SP - 194

EP - 202

JO - Chemosphere

JF - Chemosphere

ER -