Analysis of the Differences in Rhizosphere Microbial Communities and Pathogen Adaptability in Chili Root Rot Disease Between Continuous Cropping and Rotation Cropping Systems
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 8/1/2025
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Summary
Background
Chili cultivation faces significant challenges from continuous cropping barriers including nutrient imbalance, soil degradation, and increased disease incidence. Chili root rot, primarily caused by Fusarium species, is a major soil-borne disease that severely affects yield and quality. Crop rotation has been shown to enhance soil microbial environments and reduce disease incidence, but its specific effects on rhizosphere microbial communities in chili cultivation remain unclear.
Objective
To systematically analyze and compare the composition and diversity of rhizosphere soil microbial communities under chili continuous cropping and chili-cotton rotation systems using high-throughput sequencing. To identify key beneficial bacteria and pathogenic organisms that differ between the two cropping systems and characterize the biological properties of primary root rot pathogens.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Microorganisms,
- Study Type:Comparative Observational Study,
- Source: 10.3390/microorganisms13081806 (PMID: 40871310)