| Literature DB >> 30095898 |
Leonidas Rempelos1, Abujawad M Almuayrifi1,2, Marcin Baranski1, Catherine Tetard-Jones1, Mick Eyre1, Peter Shotton1, Ismail Cakmak3, Levent Ozturk3, Julia Cooper1, Nikolaos Volakakis4, Christoph Schmidt5, Enas Sufar1, Juan Wang1, Andrew Wilkinson1,6, Eduardo A S Rosa7, Bingqiang Zhao8, Terry J Rose9, Carlo Leifert9,10, Paul Bilsborrow1.
Abstract
Agricultural intensification over the last 40 years has increased cereal yields, but there is very limited information on the effects of intensification practices (e.g., nondiverse rotations, mineral NPK fertilizer, and pesticides) on crop health and quality. Results from the study reported here suggest that the use of mineral NPK fertilizers reduces phenolic acid and flavonoid concentrations in leaves and increases the susceptibility of wheat to lodging and powdery mildew, when compared to composted FYM inputs. In contrast, the use of herbicides, fungicides, and growth regulators reduces lodging and foliar disease severity but had no effect on phenolic acid and flavonoid concentrations. The use of composted FYM inputs also resulted in a significant grain yield reduction and not substantially reduced the severity of opportunistic pathogens such as Septoria, which remain a major yield limiting factor unless fungicides are used and/or more Septoria resistant varieties become available.Entities:
Keywords: Septoria tritici; composted FYM; disease control; mineral fertilizer; organic agriculture; phenolic profiles; powdery mildew; wheat
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30095898 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b02626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279