1. Assessing the activity of different plant-derived molecules and potential biological nitrification inhibitors on a range of soil ammonia- and nitrite-oxidizing strains.
- Author
-
Kolovou M, Panagiotou D, Süße L, Loiseleur O, Williams S, Karpouzas DG, and Papadopoulou ES
- Subjects
- Ammonia, Nitrites pharmacology, Nitrification, Nitrogen pharmacology, Soil Microbiology, Oxidation-Reduction, Archaea, Bacteria, Soil
- Abstract
Importance: Synthetic nitrification inhibitors are routinely used with nitrogen fertilizers to reduce nitrogen losses from agroecosystems, despite having drawbacks like poor efficiency, cost, and entry into the food chain. Plant-derived BNIs constitute a more environmentally conducive alternative. Knowledge on the activity of BNIs to soil nitrifiers is largely based on bioassays with a single Nitrosomonas europaea strain which does not constitute a dominant member of the community of ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms (AOM) in soil. We determined the activity of several plant-derived molecules reported as having activity, including the recently discovered maize-isolated BNI, zeanone, and its natural analog, 2-methoxy-1,4-naphthoquinone, on a range of ecologically relevant AOM and one nitrite-oxidizing bacterial culture, expanding our knowledge on the intrinsic inhibition potential of BNIs toward AOM and highlighting the necessity for a deeper understanding of the effect of BNIs on the overall soil microbiome integrity before their further use in agricultural settings., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF