Eco-friendly dual-edged management of fly ash and its antagonistic interplay with Meloidogyne incognita on beetroot (Beta vulgaris L.).
Fly ash (FA) management is a key concern of ecologists around the world, so its potential as a nutritional supplement for agro-ecosystems needs to be explored. Therefore, alternate techniques that are eco-friendly to manage this emerging dual-edged waste are preferable in this field. The current study sought to determine the soil-modifying, crop yield improvement, and nematicidal properties of FA. In this study, beetroot seeds were sown in pots comprising field soil amended with differing proportions of FA (w/w) revealed the bio-fold properties of FA. Biomineralization and mapping of elements revealed that increased nutritional elements in soil supplemented with 15% FA induced growth-performance and yield of beetroot. Molecularly and morphologically characterized Meloidogyne incognita was used as nematode in this study for optimization of nematicidal properties FA. Plant growth performance, photosynthetic pigments, and yield of beetroot were significantly reduced owing to M. incognita as compared to control (un-treated and un-inoculated), and 15% FA reversed the negative effect of M. incognita significantly (P < 0.05) as compared to control plants. Confocal laser microscopy confirmed that 15% FA augmented in soil reduced nematode-juvenile invasion in beetroot as compared with control. The PCA (principal component analysis) accounted for 98.63% and 98.8% for the total-data variability in plants without nematodes and total data variability in treated plants (M. incognita + FA) respectively, which showed fit for a significant correlation between the various studied parameters in present study.
Shakeel A
,Khan AA
,Upadhyay SK
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Interactive effect of Meloidogyne incognita and fly ash on the growth, physiology, and antioxidant properties of carrot (Daucus carota L.).
Alternative methods are needed to replace chemical nematicides because they have the potential to damage beneficial soil microbial diversity. Therefore, the present work was done to elucidate the soil ameliorative, plant-growth-promoting, and nematicidal properties of fly ash. A random block-designed pot experiment was conducted during the period, December 2018-February 2019. Seeds of carrot (Daucus carota L.) were sown under natural conditions in clay pots containing a growth medium comprising of field soil amended with different levels of fly ash. Plants were inoculated with Meloidogyne incognita that were molecularly characterized using 18S and D2/D3 fragments of 28S rDNA and morphologically through perineal pattern arrangement. The results revealed that fly ash application improved the soil's important physicochemical characteristics. The inoculation of M. incognita significantly reduced the plant growth, yield, and pigment content of carrot compared to the untreated uninoculated plants. Carrot grown in 15% fly ash (85:15 w/w field soil:fly ash) growth substrate had significantly (P ≤ 0.05) improved plant growth, yield, and pigment content as compared to the untreated inoculated plants. Moreover, the proline content and the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) were enhanced by applying 15% fly ash. Fly ash amendment to the soil not only improved plant growth and yield but also reduced the gall index and egg mass index per root system of the carrot as well. Our results, therefore, suggest that 15% fly ash can be used in a sustainable way to improve the growth, yield, and resistance of carrot against the infection of M. incognita.
Shakeel A
,Bhat AH
,Bhat AA
,Khan AA
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Optimization and utilization of emerging waste (fly ash) for growth performance of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) plant and mitigation of root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne incognita) stress.
The sustainable management of large amounts of fly ash (FA) is a concern for researchers, and we aim to determine the FA application in plant development and nematicidal activity in the current study. A pot study is therefore performed to assess the effects of adding different, FA-concentrations to soil (w/w) on the infection of chickpea plants with the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita. Sequence characteristic amplified region (SCAR) and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region-based-markers were used to molecularly confirm M. incognita. With better plant growth and chickpea yield performance, FA enhanced the nutritious components of the soil. When compared with untreated, uninoculated control (UUC) plants, the inoculation of M. incognita dramatically reduced chickpea plant growth, yield biomass, and metabolism. The findings showed that the potential of FA to lessen the root-knot nematode illness in respect of galls, egg-masses, and reproductive attributes may be used to explain the mitigating effect of FA. Fascinatingly, compared with the untreated, inoculated control (UIC) plants, the FA treatment, primarily at 20%, considerably (p ≤ 0.05) boosted plant growth, yield biomass, and pigment content. Additionally, when the amounts of FA rose, the activity of antioxidants like superoxide dismutase-SOD, catalase-CAT, and peroxidase-POX as well as osmo-protectants like proline gradually increased. Therefore, our findings imply that 20% FA can be successfully applied as a potential strategy to increase biomass yield and plant growth while simultaneously reducing M. incognita infection in chickpea plants.
Haris M
,Hussain T
,Khan A
,Upadhyay SK
,Khan AA
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Coal fly ash application as an eco-friendly approach for modulating the growth, yield, and biochemical constituents of Withania somnifera L. plants.
The solid waste known as fly ash, which is produced when coal is burned in thermal power plants, is sustainably used in agriculture. It is an excellent soil supplement for plant growth and development since it contains some desired nutrients (macro and micro), as well as being porous. The present study was done to evaluate the effect of different fly ash levels on Withania somnifera. The present study aimed to assess the impact of various fly ash (FA) concentrations on growth, yield, photosynthetic pigments, biochemical parameters, and cell viability of W. somnifera. The results showed that FA enhanced physical and chemical properties of soil like pH, electric conductivity, porosity, water-holding capacity, and nutrients. The low doses of FA-amended soil (15%) significantly increased the shoot length (36%), root length (24.5%), fresh weight of shoots and roots (107.8 and 50.6%), dry weight of shoots and roots (61.9 and 47.1%), number of fruits (70.4%), carotenoid (43%), total chlorophyll (44.3%), relative water content (109.3%), protein content (20.4%), proline content (110.3%), total phenols (116.1%), nitrogen (20.3%), phosphorus (16.9%), and potassium (26.4%). On the other hand, the higher doses, i.e., 25% of fly ash showed a negative effect on all the above parameters and induced oxidative stress by increasing lipid peroxidation (33.1%) and hydrogen peroxide (102.0%) and improving the activities of antioxidant enzymes and osmolytes. Compared to the control plants, the plants growing in soil enriched with 15 and 25% fly ash had larger stomata pores when examined using a scanning electron microscope. In addition, according to a confocal microscopic analysis of the roots of W. somnifera, higher fly ash concentrations caused membrane damage, as evidenced by an increase in the number of stained nuclei. Moreover, several functional groups and peaks of the biomolecules represented in the control and 15% of fly ash were alcohols, phenols, allenes, ketenes, isocynates, and hydrocarbons. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of the methanol extract of W. somnifera leaves cultivated in soil amended with 15% fly ash shows the presence of 47 bioactive compounds. The most abundant compounds in the methanol extract were cis-9-hexadecenal (22.33%), n-hexadecanoic acid (9.68%), cinnamic acid (6.37%), glycidyl oleate (3.88%), nonanoic acid (3.48%), and pyranone (3.57%). The lower concentrations of FA (15%) can be used to enhance plant growth and lower the accumulation of FA that results in environmental pollution.
Ansari MS
,Ahmad G
,Khan AA
,Mohamed HI
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