Enhancing soil amendment for salt stress using pretreated rice straw and cellulolytic fungi.

Yen Nhi Ma, Wiyada Mongkolthanaruk, Nuntavun Riddech
Author Information
  1. Yen Nhi Ma: Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen, 40002, Thailand.
  2. Wiyada Mongkolthanaruk: Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen, 40002, Thailand.
  3. Nuntavun Riddech: Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen, 40002, Thailand. nunrid@kku.ac.th.

Abstract

Rice straw breakdown is sluggish, which makes agricultural waste management difficult, however pretreatment procedures and cellulolytic fungi can address this issue. Through ITS sequencing, Chaetomium globosum C1, Aspergillus sp. F2, and Ascomycota sp. SM2 were identified from diverse sources. Ascomycota sp. SM2 exhibited the highest carboxymethyl cellulase (CMCase) activity (0.86 IU/mL) and filter-paper cellulase (FPase) activity (1.054 FPU/mL), while Aspergillus sp. F2 showed the highest CMCase activity (0.185 IU/mL) after various pretreatments of rice straw. These fungi thrived across a wide pH range, with Ascomycota sp. SM2 from pH 4 to 9, Aspergillus sp. F2, and Chaetomium globosum C1 thriving in alkaline conditions (pH 9). FTIR spectroscopy revealed significant structural changes in rice straw after enzymatic hydrolysis and solid-state fermentation, indicating lignin, cellulose, and hemicellulose degradation. Soil amendments with pretreated rice straw, cow manure, biochar, and these fungi increased root growth and soil nutrient availability, even under severe salt stress (up to 9.3 dS/m). The study emphasizes the need for a better understanding of Ascomycota sp. degradation capabilities and proposes that using cellulolytic fungus and pretreatment rice straw into soil amendments could mitigate salt-related difficulties and improve nutrient availability in salty soils.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. NSRF 2023/This research was supported by the Fundamental Fund of Khon Kaen University, Thailand under grant of the National Science, Research, and Innovation fund (NSRF) in year 2023

MeSH Term

Oryza
Soil
Cellulase
Salt Stress
Soil Microbiology
Cellulose
Chaetomium
Aspergillus
Hydrolysis
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Ascomycota
Fermentation
Manure
Charcoal

Chemicals

Soil
Cellulase
Cellulose
biochar
carboxymethylcellulase
Manure
Charcoal

Word Cloud

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