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1.
The influence of seed and soil inoculation on bradyrhizobial migration, nodulation, and N2 fixation was examined by using two Bradyrhizobium japonicum strains of contrasting effectiveness in N2 fixation. Seed-inoculated strains formed fewer nodules on soybeans (mostly restricted to the tap and crown roots within 0 to 5 cm from the stem base) than did bradyrhizobia distributed throughout the soil or inoculated at specific depths. Nodulation was greater below the depths at which bradyrhizobial cells were located rather than above, even though watering was done from below to minimize passive bradyrhizobial migration with percolating water. The most profuse nodulation occurred within approximately 5 cm below the point of placement and was generally negligible below 10 cm. These and other results suggest that bradyrhizobial migration from the initial point of placement was very limited. Nevertheless, the more competitive strain, effective strain THA 7, migrated into soil to a greater extent than the ineffective strain THA 1 did. Nitrogen fixation resulting from the dual-strain inoculations differed depending on the method of inoculation. For example, the amount of N2 fixed when both strains were slurried together onto the seed was about half that obtained from mixing the effective strain into the soil with the ineffective strain on the seed. The results indicate the importance of rhizobial distribution or movement into soil for nodulation, nodule distribution, strain competitiveness, and N2 fixation in soil-grown legumes.  相似文献   

2.
Interactions of soybean with Bradyrhizobium japonicum 123 (serogroup 123) and 138 (serogroup c1) were used to examine the relationship between early infection rates, competition for nodulation, and patterns of nodule occupancy. Both strains formed more infections in autoclaved soil (sterile soil) than in untreated soil (unsterile soil). Inoculation did not increase numbers of infection threads in unsterile soil-grown plants, where infection of proximal portions of primary roots was complete by 5 days after planting. Both strains infected and nodulated at similar rates in sterile soil. Nodules were always clustered on the upper root system, regardless of inoculation and soil treatment. Sixty-seven percent of the nodules of uninoculated plants grown in unsterile soil were occupied by rhizobia belonging to serogroups other than 123 or c1. Inoculation with strain 123 or 138 increased occupancy by that strain at the expense of residency by other rhizobia. Eighty-three percent of all nodules on plants dually inoculated with both strains in sterile soil contained strain 138. The corresponding value for plants inoculated in unsterile soil was 31%. Neither inoculum strain dominated occupancy of first-formed nodules in unsterile soil. It appears that north central Missouri soil may not have populations of highly competitive serogroup 123 and that early infection and nodulation rates do not contribute to the competitive success of strain 138.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Cultures of Rhizobium trifolii resistant to the action of a given bacteriophage, may vary appreciably in their nitrogen fixing ability in association with the proper host plant. Likewise, cultures of Rh. trifolii, sensitive to bacteriophage may or may not benefit the host plant as judged by nitrogen fixation.Since sensitive and resistant cultures may be comparable in their nitrogen fixing capacity, it appears that the behavior of a culture of Rh. trifolii toward the lytic action of a specific bacteriophage in vitro cannot be correlated with its nitrogen fixing ability in association with the host plant.If a bacteriophage is added to a sensitive strain of Rh. trifolii used for inoculation of red clover, the cultures recovered from the nudules are often only of the resistant type. When this occurs the nitrogen fixed through association of plant and bacteria is decreased in the case of a good strain, but is unaffected if the strain is of the poor type. The addition of phage to a resistant strain of Rh. trifolii used for inoculation of red clover plants does not change the resistant type of culture recovered from the nodules, nor is the fixation of nitrogen by plant and bacteria affected.  相似文献   

4.
Dicarboxylic acid transport mutants of Rhizobium species are usually deficient in their ability to fix atmospheric dinitrogen. We report here a study comparing the physiology of root nodules on Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Goldie induced by an effective strain of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar phaseoli and a C4-dicarboxylic acid utilization mutant. The mutant, while able to form nodules, was ineffective in N2 fixation. Carbohydrates and organic acids of roots and nodules formed by the 2 strains were monitored at 3-day intervals from 13 to 34 days after inoculation. Both carbohydrates and organic acids accumulated in ineffective nodules in comparison with the effective nodules. The concentration of malic acid was tenfold higher in ineffective nodules than in effective nodules. Other organic acids, i.e., lactate, malonate, ascorbate and gluconate, were also detected. Lactate and ascorbate were the only other organic acids accumulating in ineffective nodules. The most prevalent carbohydrates found in both types of nodules were sucrose, glucose and fructose. Myo-inositol was the only cyclitol detected in both types of nodules. Carbohydrates and organic acids were present in lower concentration in roots than in nodules, except for lactate. These compounds were not consistently detected in higher concentration in roots from plants inoculated with the mutant strain, as was the case in nodules.  相似文献   

5.
An ineffective Rhizobium leguminosarum strain capable of forming green nodules of similar size and number as normally effective strains was tested for its ability to compete with an effective strain in nodule formation on the pea. The ineffective strain was found to be more competitive and influenced the pattern of nodulation by the effective strain on the same root system. Nodules containing both strains were pink and able to reduce acetylene.  相似文献   

6.
T. A. Lie 《Plant and Soil》1969,30(3):391-404
Summary Nodulation of pea and broad bean plants grown in the light was found to be reduced when the roots were exposed to far-red light for 5–15 minutes daily during 5 consecutive days following inoculation with nodule bacteria. Similar results were obtained following a single exposure to far-red light during a period of 15 minutes at the 3rd or 4th day after inoculation. When the roots were exposed to far-red light either before inoculation or during the first two days afterwards there were either no effects or only slight effects on nodulation The inhibitory effect of far-red light on nodulation was partly reduced by subsequent exposure to red light, provided that the same part of the plant was exposed to both red and far-red light,viz either the root or the shoot. When different parts of the plant were exposed to red and far-red light respectively, there was no interaction between the two kinds of light on nodulation. Plants whose roots were exposed to far-red light did not subsequently show stem elongation.Nodules were found to develop on the roots of pea plants grown in the dark, provided that the plants were kept at or below 22°C. At 25°C nodulation was almost absent. Nodulation was decreased by addition of kinetin and IAA. In contrast to plants grown in the light pea plants grown in the dark, inoculated with either an effective or ineffective strain of Rhizobium, developed equal numbers of nodules. Exposure to red light slightly increased the percentage of nodulated plants but decreased the number of nodules per plant. Exposure to far-red light slightly decreased both the percentage of nodulated plants and the number of nodules per plant. The effect of far-red light was counteracted by red light andvice versa.  相似文献   

7.
Competition between effective and ineffective Rhizobium galegae strains nodulating Galega orientalis was examined on the basis of plant growth, nodulation, antibiotic resistance, and PCR results. In a preliminary experiment in Leonard's jars, ineffective R. galegae strains HAMBI 1207 and HAMBI 1209 competed in similar manners with the effective strain R. galegae HAMBI 1174. In a pot experiment, soil was inoculated with 0 to 10(5) HAMBI 1207 cells per g before G. orientalis was sown. Seeds of G. orientalis were surface inoculated with 2 x 10(4) and 2 x 10(5) cells of HAMBI 1174 per seed (which represent half and fivefold the commercially recommended amount of inoculant, respectively). Plant yield and nodulation by the effective strain were significantly reduced, with as few as 10(2) ineffective rhizobia per g of soil, and the inoculation response was not improved by the 10-fold greater dose of the inoculant. Bacteria occupying the nodules were identified by antibiotic resistance and PCR with primers specific for R. galegae HAMBI 1174, R. galegae, and genes coding for bacterial 16S rRNA (bacterial 16S rDNA). Sixty-two large nodules examined were occupied by the effective strain HAMBI 1174, as proven by antibiotic resistance and amplification of the strain-specific fragment. From 20 small nodules, only the species-specific fragment could be amplified, and isolated bacteria had the same antibiotic resistance and 16S PCR restriction pattern as strain HAMBI 1207. PCR with our strain-specific and species-specific primers provides a powerful tool for strain identification of R. galegae directly from nodules without genetic modification of the bacteria.  相似文献   

8.
The success of rhizobial inoculation on plant roots is often limited by several factors, including environmental conditions, the number of infective cells applied, the presence of competing indigenous (native) rhizobia, and the inoculation method. Many approaches have been taken to solve the problem of inoculant competition by naturalized populations of compatible rhizobia present in soil, but so far without a satisfactory solution. We used antibiotic resistance and molecular profiles as tools to find a reliable and accurate method for competitiveness assay between introduced Bradyrhizobium sp. strains and indigenous rhizobia strains that nodulate peanut in Argentina. The positional advantage of rhizobia soil population for nodulation was assessed using a laboratory model in which a rhizobial population is established in sterile vermiculite. We observed an increase in nodule number per plant and nodule occupancy for strains established in vermiculite. In field experiments, only 9% of total nodules were formed by bacteria inoculated by direct coating of seed, whereas 78% of nodules were formed by bacteria inoculated in the furrow at seeding. In each case, the other nodules were formed by indigenous strains or by both strains (inoculated and indigenous). These findings indicate a positional advantage of native rhizobia or in-furrow inoculated rhizobia for nodulation in peanut.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Four cultivars ofTrifolium subterraneum were nodulated by five strains ofRhizobium leguminosarum; all combinations except one gave 100% nodulation. Rates of nodule formation and total nodule numbers were similar to those with an effectiveR. trifolii strain. The nodules were more commonly associated with lateral roots and were ineffective in nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

10.
Summary We did not succeed in transforming the host specificity of rhizobia reliably, in spite of the use of DNA preparations from 3 different rhizobia species (Rh. meliloti, Rh. trifolii, Rh. leguminosarum) and of 35 acceptor strains representative for 7 rhizobia species. Very few positive results could not be repeated. Rhizobia from ineffective nodules on alfalfa plants of the first inoculation test following the transformation procedure formed effective nodules during a second plant passage. Reisolates from these nodules exhibiting a rough type of growth differ from the smooth colonies of the donator strain as well as of the acceptor strains. These rough growing rhizobia agree with the donator strain but not with the acceptor strains as to the base composition of their deoxyribonucleic acids. Therefore we assume that some cells of the donator have survived the DNA preparation and the 24 h sterilization by ethanol, and being only weakened have formed at first ineffective but secondly—by way of regeneration—effective nodules.Pseudonodules of unknown origin on alfalfa roots may be very similar to ineffective bacteria root nodules. They consist mainly of parenchymatic tissue partly with one or several vascular bundles. Because these exuberances were found also on the roots of uninoculated control plants, they did not result from a transformation process.  相似文献   

11.
A non-nodulating auxotroph (L4-73) derived from an effective strain (L4) of Rhizobium leguminosarum has a growth requirement for adenine and thiamine. The auxotroph was able to infect the roots of the host plant Pisum sativum L. but formed root nodules (ineffective in nitrogen fixation) only when adenine and, to a lesser extent, thiamine were added to the plant substrate. Nodules formed in the presence of adenine were structurally abnormal, containing small cells in which infection threads appeared to have aborted. In the presence of thiamine the auxotroph produced a smaller number of nodules which were slightly more developed and were able to reduce trace amounts of acetylene to ethylene. The adenine effect predominated when both growth factors were added together or separately in different sequences. Adenine amendment was required during the first 6 days following inoculation to achieve the maximum number of nodules. The block in symbiosis could not be fully overcome by sequential addition or removal from the root medium of either compound or by addition of some other adeninecontaining compounds. Partial prototroph revertants requiring adenine but not thiamine induced a nodulation response similar to that of the original auxotroph in the presence of thiamine; partial prototrophs requiring thiamine only were almost fully effective. Bioassay of pea root tissue indicated the presence of significant amounts of both adenine and thiamine or related substances in the roots. The auxotroph was able to compete with the parent strain L4 in nodulation on roots of pea only in the presence of exogenous adenine.  相似文献   

12.
Regulation of nodulation in Alnus incana-Frankia symbiosis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have studied regulation of nodulation in Alnus incana (L.) Moench using double inoculations in plastic pouches and a slide technique to observe root hair deformation. Initially, the distribution of nodules between main and lateral roots appeared quite constant, independent of the concentration of inoculum (1 to 250 μg of crushed nodules plant−1). Susceptibility to infection after the second inoculation was restricted to lateral roots after the initial infections developed. When pre-existing nodules were excised before the second inoculation, subsequent nodules appeared to arise where infections had arrested at stages earlier than actual nodule emergence. We observed that root hairs formed postinoculation were very crowded and short with a pronounced deformation. No nodules were found later on this region of the root, suggesting a loss of susceptibility in this region. Split-root experiments with delays between inoculation of the first and second side of the root system showed irreversible, systemic inhibition of nodulation on the second side starting between 3 and 6 days after the inoculation of the first side. Only when compatible, infective strains were used in the first inoculation, was nodule formation inhibited after the second inoculation. We conclude that autoregulation of nodulation operates in Alnus incana and on a time scale similar to what is found in some legumes.  相似文献   

13.
The expression of plant genes during symbiosis of Sesbania rostrata with Rhizobium sp. and Azorhizobium caulinodans was studied by comparing two-dimensional PAGE patterns of in vitro translation products of poly(A)+ RNA from uninfected roots and stems with that of root and stem nodules. Both types of nodules are essentially similar, particularly when stem nodules are formed in the dark. We detected the specific expression of at least 16 genes in stem and root nodules and observed the stimulated expression of about 10 other genes in both nodules. Six of the nodule-specific translation products (apparent molecular masses around 16 kDa) cross-react with an antiserum raised against leghemoglobin purified from Sesbania rostrata stem nodules. During stem nodule development, most of the nodule-stimulated genes are expressed concomitantly with leghemoglobin at day 12 after inoculation. However, some genes are already stimulated at days 6–7, some others later in development (day 18), and some are transiently activated. Patterns of root nodules induced by either Azorhizobium caulinodans strain ORS571, capable of effective root and stem nodulation, or Rhizobium sp. strain ORS51, capable of effective root nodulation only, are very similar except for a specific 37.5 kDa polypeptide. Several types of ineffective stem and root nodules were studied; in every case the amount of leghemoglobin components appeared reduced together with most of the nodule-stimulated polypeptides.  相似文献   

14.
Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar trifolii strain TA1 nodulates a range of Trifolium plants including red, white and subterranean clovers. Nitrogen-fixing nodules are promptly initiated on the tap roots of these plants at the site of inoculation. In contrast to these associations, strain TA1 has a Nod- phenotype on a particular cultivar of subterranean clover called Woogenellup (A.H. Gibson, Aust J Agric Sci 19: (1968) 907–918) where it induces rare, poorly developed, slow-to-appear and ineffective lateral root nodules. By comparing the nodulation gene region of strain TA1 with that of another R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii strain ANU843, which is capable of efficiently nodulating cv. Woogenellup, we have shown that the nodT gene (B.P. Surin et al., Mol Microbiol 4: (1990) 245–252) is essential for nodulation on cv. Woogenellup. The nodT gene is naturally absent in strain TA1. A cosmid clone spanning the entire nodulation gene region of strain TA1 was capable of conferring nodulation ability to R.l. bv. trifolii strains deleted for nodulation genes, but only on cultivars of subterranean clovers nodulated by strain TA1. This shows that cultivar recognition events are, in part, determined by genes in the nodulation region of strain TA1. Complementation studies also indicated that strain TA1 contains negatively-acting genes located on the Sym plasmid and elsewhere, which specifically block nodulation of cv. Woogenellup.  相似文献   

15.
Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is a traditional crop in much of Latin America, where it is often planted into soils containing numerous, sometimes ineffective, indigenous rhizobia. The presence of these indigenous organisms can limit response to inoculation. Because of this, we have sought bean cultivars that will nodulate preferentially with the inoculant strain, and have previously reported on the preference between the bean cultivar RAB39 and strains of Rhizobium tropici. We have detailed this interaction using the inoculant-quality strain UMR1899. In the present study the root tip marking (RTM) technique was used to demonstrate that this preference in nodulation was evident, even when inoculation with UMR1899 was delayed up to 8?relative to that with Rhizobium etli UMR1632. In contrast to studies with other legumes, roots of RAB39 were not predisposed to nodulate with UMR1632, even though preexposed to this strain for considerable periods of time. The presence of UMR1899 actually reduced nodulation by UMR1632 substantially, even when inoculation with UMR1899 was significantly delayed. When UMR1899 and UMR1632 were applied to separate halves of a split-root system, the number of nodules on the side receiving UMR1632 was less than for the half root inoculated with UMR1899, but the differences were not significant. This suggests that the preference response is not systemic but requires proximity between the strains involved. UMR1899 produced more than 50% of the nodules even when the ratio of UMR1632:UMR1899 in the inoculant was 10:1. The results are further evidence of a stable and marked preference of RAB39 for UMR1899, which warrants a more detailed study at the field level.Key words: Phaseolus vulgaris L., common bean, delayed inoculation, strain preference, cell proportions.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The loose cuticles of the cells of wilted staminal hairs ofTradescantia virginica do not contain cellulose at all; (compare fig. 6 with fig. 5 and 7). They exhibit a positive rodlet birefringence with reference to the cell axis, which is probably due to cuticular folds and to longitudinal spaces inside the cuticle. There is a faint negative intrinsic birefringence in normal as well as in dewaxed cuticles, suggesting the presence of chemically bound, radially oriented chain molecules in these longitudinal spaces. (See table 1 and fig. 8.)According to the oblique extinction of single cell walls between crossed nicols and according to the fact that the cell wall, if torn, sometimes shows unwinding spirals (fig. 1, 2) the fibrillar structure of the cellulose cell wall in many cells must be oriented according to a flat Z- or S-spiral. In other cells this structure is predominantly transverse.Electron micrographs show that in addition to the more or less transversely oriented predominant inner layer of the cell wall, there is an outer layer with more or less isotropic, fibrillar structure (fig. 10, 11, 12). This is explained by assuming that the outer layer is in a less favourable position for intussusception of new fibrils during growth than the inner one, which will cause a reversion of the originally transverse fibril orientation in the former. The same layer structure is already found in very young cells, still showing cell division; (fig. 13, 14). The fibril thickness is about 100 Å.The cell walls separating the cells of the staminal hairs are perforated by some 800 holes of about 0,1 diameter, which probably contained plasmodesmata, (fig. 15, 16).  相似文献   

17.
This work studied the effects of P fertilization on nodulation of field-grown soybean by two Bradyrhizobium strains (SMGS1 and THA7), and checked if differences between strains were consistent with bacterial growth and growth pouch nodulation ability in response to P availability. In the field, nodule dry weight and nitrogen fixation activity of inoculated soybean were studied on typical acid soils of Thaïland at the flowering (R1) stage and at the end of grain filling. Grain yield, growth and phosphorus content were recorded. The bradyrhizobial strains were cultivated in culture medium, and growth parameters recorded. Nodulation patterns were observed during growth pouch experiments: infective root cells were inoculated with strains cultivated at two P concentrations in their culture media, namely 1 M and 1 mM. Ten days after inoculation, the position of each nodule was measured relative to the root tip (RT) mark, expressed relative to the smallest emerging root hairs-RT distance in the nodulation frequency profile, and the consistency of responses was tested. In the field, on P deficient soils, dry weight of nodules was higher with Bradyrhizobium japonicum strain SMGS1 than with strain THA7. P supply increased the number and dry weight of nodules for both strains, with a higher dry weight response for THA7 than for SMGS1. It also had a positive effect on tissue phosphorus status and grain yield at R8 stage. In growth media, significant differences were recorded between strains under P-limiting conditions: The growth rate was higher for strain SMGS1, as well as the maximal number of bacterial cells supported. With growth pouch, inoculating plants with bacteria grown in P-deficient medium resulted in a less intense nodulation of roots by THA7, and with nodules appearing earlier on roots than in the case of SMGS1. At 1 mM P, there was no significant difference between strains. Thus, strain THA7 is more affected by P deficiency than strain SMGS1. Although P was not supplied in the same way in the soil and in the growth pouch experiments, this consistency of behaviour between work scales indicates that phosphorus availability is a key component for a successful inoculation. Furthermore, the study of bacterial growth rates and nodulation profile represents an interesting step for bacterial screening for low P soils. [-11pt]  相似文献   

18.
Heron DS  Pueppke SG 《Plant physiology》1987,84(4):1391-1396
Double inoculation (15 h apart) of the soybean cultivar Williams with Bradyrhizobium japonicum I-110ARS reveals a rapid regulatory plant response that inhibits nodulation of distal portions of the primary root (M Pierce, WD Bauer 1984 Plant Physiol 73: 286-290). Only living, homologous rhizobia elicit the response. We conducted similar double inoculation experiments to test the hypothesis that this is a universal phenomenon in soybean symbioses. We investigated interactions of the cultivar McCall with the slow-growing strain Bradyrhizobium sp. 3185 (=3G4b16) and strains of the fast-growing soybean symbiont, Rhizobium fredii (USDA191 [Nod+ on McCall] and USDA257 [Nod on McCall]). Nodulation was not detectably inhibited when USDA257 was included in various combinations with an inoculum of USDA191. Strain USDA257 cohabited nodules with strain USDA191 when plants were inoculated sequentially with both strains, but USDA257 did not nodulate McCall when a sterile culture filtrate of USDA191 was added to USDA257 inoculum. There was only a slight inhibition of nodulation of distal portions of the primary root in double inoculation experiments with McCall and strain 3185. Because these results were unexpected, we repeated the experiments with Williams and strain I-110ARS. The response was similar to that observed in the McCall × 3185 interaction. Regulation of nodulation on the primary root thus appears to be variable and depend on strain X cultivar interactions.  相似文献   

19.
Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii T24 is ineffective in symbiotic nitrogen fixation, produces a potent antibiotic (referred to here as trifolitoxin) that is bacteriostatic to certain Rhizobium strains, and is very competitive for clover root nodulation (EA Schwinghamer, RP Belkengren 1968 Arch Mikrobiol 64: 130-145). The primary objective of this work was to demonstrate the roles of nodulation and trifolitoxin production in the expression of nodulation competitiveness by T24. Unlike wildtype T24, transposon mutants of T24 lacking trifolitoxin production were unable to decrease clover nodulation by an effective, trifolitoxin-sensitive strain of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii. A non-nodulating transposon mutant of T24 prevented clover nodulation by a trifolitoxin-sensitive R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii when co-inoculated with a T24 mutant lacking trifolitoxin production. Neither mutant alone prevented nodulation by the trifolitoxin-sensitive strain. These results demonstrate that trifolitoxin production and nodulation are required for the expression of nodulation competitiveness by strain T24. A trifolitoxin-sensitive strain of R. meliloti did not nodulate alfalfa when co-inoculated with T24 and a trifolitoxin-resistant strain of R. meliloti. Thus, a trifolitoxin-producing strain was useful in regulating nodule occupancy on a legume host other than clover. Trifolitoxin production was constitutive in both minimal and enriched media. Trifolitoxin was found to inhibit the growth of 95% of all strains of R. leguminosarum bvs. trifolii, viceae, and phaseoli tested. Strains of all 13 biotypes of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii were inhibited by trifolitoxin. Three strains of R. fredii were also inhibited. Strain T24 ineffectively nodulated 46 clover species, did not nodulate Trifolium ambiguum, and induced partially effective nodules on Trifolium micranthum. Since T24 produced partially effective nodules on T. micranthum and since a trifolitoxin-minus mutant of T24 induced ineffective nodules, trifolitoxin production is not the cause of the symbiotic ineffectiveness of T24.  相似文献   

20.
Legume roots in nature are usually colonized with rhizobia and different arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) species. Light microscopy that visualizes the presence of AMF in roots is not able to differentiate the ratio of each AMF species in the root and nodule tissues in mixed fungal inoculation. The purpose of this study was to characterize the dominant species of mycorrhiza in roots and nodules of plants co-inoculated with mycorrhizal fungi and rhizobial strains. Glomus intraradices (GI), Glomus mosseae (GM), their mix (GI + GM), and six Mesorhizobium ciceri strains were used to inoculate chickpea. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) was used to assess occupancy of these fungal species in roots and nodules. Results showed that GI molecular ratio and relative density were higher than GM in both roots and nodules. These differences in molecular ratio and density between GI and GM in nodules were three folds higher than roots. The results suggested that M. ciceri strains have different effects on nodulation and mycorrhizal colonization pattern. Plants with bacterial S3 and S1 strains produced the highest root nodulation and higher fungal density in both the roots and nodules.  相似文献   

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