oh this is a topic that fascinates me!
Moreover, I always put a small part of my garden soil in the seedling medium, to 'sow' any soil symbiosis, and I never sterilize.
I want to take the rhizosphere into account and I try to emulate, to make people understand this ecological system, but perhaps without much success: I wrote and published this article (in French unfortunately but some have perhaps to be a translator)
https://www.aujardin.info/fiches/rhizosphere-micro-organismes-plantes-equipe-gagne.php to make people understand that we must stop using pesticides and chemical fertilizers in the ground, at least in gardens.
in pots, symbiosis and other mutual aid relationships cannot resist the use of chemical fertilizers, because mutual aid between plants and microorganisms must be give and take. However, if the plant has these directly assimilable nutrients, it has no reason to promote and nourish lactic acid bacteria and fungi. The latter if they exist, die or at best go dormant.
Likewise, insecticides have an effect on these microbiota, and fungicides kill some of the insects and other soil life. (let's not talk about us who also absorb it in the process)
However, in a pot, a small volume, it is difficult to develop a plant without fertilizer, except by putting a little good compost or well decomposed manure, (which I do as soon as possible) but it does not necessarily suit to all.
Mycelia increase the exchange surface between the plant and its environment, but in pots, this is not really possible.
Unless :
-use large pots
- to transplant in the ground as quickly as possible.
I have the example of an Iris (probably
sibirica, unfortunately it comes from recycled pot soil, so I'm not sure). Germinated in a large pot (made for another plant) it grows 5 times faster than in a seedling pot. Germinated last spring and planted in the ground in the fall, it is currently making 12 new shoots, some of which will flower. He never had any fertilizer. But maybe your
Iris sibirica usually grow this fast when grown well?