RESUMO
Waxy maize (Zea mays L. sinensis Kulesh) is highly regarded for its high nutritional content and unique taste. Although the stalks and leaves contain high carbohydrate levels after ear harvesting, inadequate crude protein (CP) limits the utilization and promotion of waxy maize silage in animal husbandry. In this study, waxy maize and fodder soybeans were mixed for sowing in different proportions [1:0 (CK), 1:1 (A1), 1:2 (A2), 1:3 (A3), and 1:4 (A4)] to investigate the effects of different mixing ratios on the growth of the waxy maize, the chemical indices, fermentation quality, and the microbial community of the mixed silage after ear harvesting. The mixed planting of waxy maize and fodder soybeans in different proportions had no effect on the yield and quality of the waxy maize ears and increased the aboveground biomass after ear harvesting. After ear harvesting, the neutral detergent fiber (NDF) and acid detergent fiber (ADF) contents significantly decreased, and the CP content and relative feeding value (RFV) gradually increased in the mixed silage. The pH of the treatments was lower than 4.2 except for A4, and the lowest ammonia nitrogen (AN) concentration was observed in A3. With increasing proportions of fodder soybeans, the abundance of beneficial bacteria increased and that of harmful bacteria decreased; Firmicutes and Lactobacillus were the dominant phylum and genus, respectively, and both increased gradually. Redundancy analysis (RDA) revealed that the fermentation indices affecting the microbial community composition in the silage were inconsistent among the different mixed sowing combinations. The Mantel test showed that the composition of the microbial communities in the treatments was significantly correlated with the ADF, water-soluble carbohydrate (WSC), and propionic acid (PA) contents. Comprehensive analysis revealed that the optimal mixed sowing ratio of waxy maize to fodder soybeans was 1:3, and waxy maize and fodder soybeans silage can increase the utilization of aboveground biomass and improve the fermentation quality and feeding quality of silage by changing the microbial community. These findings lay a certain theoretical foundation for improving the utilization of waxy maize.
RESUMO
Potentilla anserina L. has an abundance of bioactive compounds and is widely recognized for its diverse applications in traditional medicine and as a food. In August 2023, typical symptoms of anthracnose were observed in 80% of P. anserina plants in Harbin, China. Symptoms, characterized by reddish-brown spots, tend to occur more frequently on leaves closer to the ground. They initially appeared as oval or irregular circles, measuring 1 to 3 mm in diameter, and later merged into larger patches surrounded by chlorotic areas on the leaves. Twenty leaves exhibiting characteristic symptoms were sampled. Each leaf was sectioned into 5×5 mm pieces at the interface between the diseased and healthy tissues. The sections were disinfected sequentially with 75% ethanol for 30 s, followed by 1% NaClO for 2 min, rinsed three times in sterilized distilled water. Post air-drying, samples were cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates and incubated at 26°C in the dark for 5 d, yielding nine morphologically similar single-spore isolates (JTC1 to JTC9). The colonies initially displayed gray aerial mycelia, becoming pale brown, accompanied by numerous black microsclerotia. The acervuli appeared black, protruded from the surface of the medium, and were adorned with dark brown setae. Setae (n=50) ranged from 58.4 to 188.2 µm in length, appearing dark brown to black, with smooth walls, rounded tips, swollen bases, and containing 1 to 4 septa. The conidia were hyaline, aseptate, cylindrical to spindle-shaped, with blunt and rounded ends, measuring 13.7 to 18.3 µm in length and 3.4 to 4.3 µm in width (n=50). Morphological analysis indicated a close affinity with Colletotrichum americae-borealis (Damm et al. 2014). For molecular identification, genomic DNA was extracted from three representative isolates (JTC1, JTC2, and JTC3).The ITS, HIS3ï¼GAPDH, and ACT genes were amplified and sequenced using the primers described previously by Damm et al. (2014). The sequences were submitted to GenBank (ITS: PP338190 to PP338192; HIS3: PP355770 to PP355772; GAPDH: PP355773 to PP355775; ACT: PP355776 to PP355778). BLAST analysis showed 99 to 100% identity with C. americae-borealis type strain CBS 136232 (GenBank accessions: KM105224, KM105364, KM105579, and, KM105434, respectively). Multigene phylogenetic analysis positioned the three isolates close to C. americae-borealis. Pathogenicity tests were performed twice on 6-week-old P. anserina seedlings (cv. Qinghai Juema 1) in a greenhouse. A conidial suspension of the JTC1 isolate (1×105 conidia/ml) was sprayed applied to ten pots, each containing two seedlings, and the plants in the control pots were sprayed with sterile distilled water. Two weeks after inoculation under greenhouse conditions (26/22°C day/night temperature, 12-hour photoperiod, 90% relative humidity), the inoculated seedlings exhibited brown spots and necrotic lesions similar to those observed in the field, C. americae-borealis was successfully reisolated from these symptomatic tissues. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of C. americae-borealis causing leaf spot on P. anserina in China. Anthracnose caused by C. americae-borealis is associated with leaf spot disease in oats (Wang et al. 2022), alfalfa (Li et al. 2021), and licorice (Lyu et al.2020). However, C. americae-borealis poses a significant threat to P. anserina in China as well, highlighting the urgent need to develop effective disease management strategies.
RESUMO
White clover (Trifolium repens L.) is an excellent quality forage legume species with superior planting efficiency, which reduces the cost of artificial weeding and nitrogen fertilizer inputs and has feeding and economic value. However, from June to September 2022, severe stem rot affected the yield and quality of white clover crops in Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China. The aim of this study was to identify the causative agents of the disease. Overall, Colletotrichum truncatum (6 isolates) and C. destructivum (10 isolates) were obtained from rotten white clover stems and identified according to morpho-molecular characteristics and phylogenetic analyses. Pathogenicity tests of the isolates revealed that C. destructivum had a higher pathogenicity to white clover than C. truncatum. In addition, all isolates were highly pathogenic to broad bean, fodder soybean, soybean, pak choi, and chickpea, pathogenic to mint, and did not infect corn, wheat, or cilantro. C. destructivum and C. truncatum isolates were very sensitive to tebuconazole and pyraclostrobin, with EC50 values of 0.54 to 0.70 µg/ml and 0.42 to 0.62 µg/ml, respectively, efficacies ranging between 93.2 to 94.9% and 90.2 to 95.2% at 600 µg/ml and 450 µg/ml, respectively, and EC90 values of 1.88 to 13.36 µg/ml and 1.32 to 23.39 µg/ml, respectively. Therefore, intercropping of host and non-host plants and chemicals can be considered to control stem rot in white clover. These results provide a basis for controlling C. destructivum and C. truncatum in white clover in China.
RESUMO
Oat is a food and forage crop species widely cultivated worldwide, and it is also an important forage grass in plateau regions of China, where there is a high level of ultraviolet radiation and sunlight. Screening suitable reference genes for oat under UV-B and high-light stresses is a prerequisite for ensuring the accuracy of real-time quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR) data used in plant adaptation research. In this study, eight candidate reference genes (sulfite oxidase, SUOX; victorin binding protein, VBP; actin-encoding, Actin1; protein PSK SIMULATOR 1-like, PSKS1; TATA-binding protein 2-like, TBP2; ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2, UBC2; elongation factor 1-alpha, EF1-α; glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase 1, GAPDH1;) were selected based on previous studies and our oat transcriptome data. The expression stability of these reference genes in oat roots, stems, and leaves under UV-B and high-light stresses was first calculated using three frequently used statistical software (geNorm, NormFinder, and BestKeeper), and then the comprehensive stability of these genes was evaluated using RefFinder. The results showed that the most stably expressed reference genes in the roots, stems, and leaves of oat under UV-B stress were EF1-α, TBP2, and PSKS1, respectively; the most stably expressed reference genes in the roots, stems, and leaves under high-light stress were PSKS1, UBC2, and PSKS1, respectively. PSKS1 was the most stably expressed reference gene in all the samples. The reliability of the selected reference genes was further validated by analysis of the expression of the phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) gene. This study highlights reference genes for accurate quantitative analysis of gene expression in different tissues of oat under UV-B and high-light stresses.