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1.
The importance of microniches for the survival of introduced Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar trifolii cells was studied in sterilized and recolonized sterilized loamy sand and silt loam. The recolonized soils contained several species of soil microorganisms but were free of protozoa. Part of these soil samples was inoculated with the flagellate Bodo saltans, precultured on rhizobial cells. The introduced organisms were enumerated in different soil fractions by washing the soil, using a standardized washing procedure. With this method, free organisms and organisms associated with soil particles or aggregates >50 μm were separated. The total number of rhizobia was influenced slightly (silt loam) or not at all (loamy sand) by the recolonization with microorganisms or by the addition of flagellates alone. However, when both flagellates and microorganisms were present, numbers of rhizobia decreased drastically. This decrease was more than the sum of both effects separately. Nevertheless, populations of rhizobia were still higher than in natural soil. In the presence of flagellates, higher percentages of rhizobia and other microorganisms were associated with soil particles or aggregates >50 μm than in the absence of flagellates. In recolonized soils, however, the percentages of particle-associated rhizobia were lower than in soils not recolonized previous to inoculation. Thus, the presence of other microorganisms hindered rhizobial colonization of sites where they are normally associated with soil particles or aggregates.  相似文献   

2.
Fully grown broth cultures of various fast- and slow-growing rhizobia were deliberately diluted with various diluents before their aseptic incorporation into autoclaved peat in polypropylene bags (aseptic method) or mixed with the peat autoclaved in trays (tray method). In a factorial experiment with the aseptic method, autoclaved and irradiated peat samples from five countries were used to prepare inoculants with water-diluted cultures of three Rhizobium spp. When distilled water was used as the diluent, the multiplication and survival of rhizobia in the peat was similar to that with diluents having a high nutrient status when the aseptic method was used. In the factorial experiment, the mean viable counts per gram of inoculant were log 9.23 (strain TAL 102) > log 8.92 (strain TAL 82) > log 7.89 (strain TAL 182) after 24 weeks of storage at 28°C. The peat from Argentina was the most superior for the three Rhizobium spp., with a mean viable count of log 9.0 per g at the end of the storage period. The quality of inoculants produced with diluted cultures was significantly (P = 0.05) better with irradiated than with autoclaved peat, as shown from the factorial experiment. With the tray method, rhizobia in cultures diluted 1,000-fold or less multiplied and stored satisfactorily in the presence of postinoculation contaminants, as determined by plate counts, membrane filter immunofluorescence, and plant infection procedures. All strains of rhizobia used in both the methods showed various degrees of population decline in the inoculants when stored at 28°C. Fast- and slow-growing rhizobia in matured inoculants produced by the two methods showed significant (P < 0.01) decline in viability when stored at 4°C, whereas the viability of some strains increased significantly (P < 0.01) at the same temperature. The plant effectiveness of inoculants produced with diluted cultures and autoclaved peat did not differ significantly from that of inoculants produced with undiluted cultures and gamma-irradiated peat.  相似文献   

3.
The successful nodulation of legumes by a Rhizobium strain is determined by the competitive ability of that strain against the mixture of other native and inoculant rhizobia. Competition among six Leucaena rhizobial strains in single and multistrain inoculants were studied. Field inoculation trials were conducted in an oxisol and a mollisol soil, both of which contained indigenous Leucaena-nodulating rhizobia. Strain-specific fluorescent antibodies were used for the identification of the strains in Leucaena nodules. Mixtures of three recommended inoculum strains for Leucaena spp. (TAL82, TAL582, and TAL1145) were used in peat-based inocula either alone or with one of the three other strains isolated from the sites, B213, B214, and B215. Each of these latter three strains was also used as single-strain inocula to study their competition with the native rhizobia in the two soil systems. In the oxisol soil, strains B213 and B215, when used as single-strain inocula, outcompeted the native rhizobia and formed 92 and 62% of the nodules, respectively. Strain B214 was the least competitive in oxisol soil, where it formed 30% of the nodules, and the best in mollisol soil, where it formed 70% of the nodules. The most successful competitor for nodulation in multistrain inocula was strain TAL1145, which outcompeted native and other inoculum Leucaena rhizobia in both soils. None of the strains in single or multistrain inoculants was capable of completely overcoming the resident rhizobia, which formed 4 to 70% of the total nodules in oxisol soil and 12 to 72% in mollisol soil. No strong relationship was detected between the size of the rhizosphere population of a strain and its successful occupation of nodules.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of inoculant carrier, temperature, and storage period on the survival of Rhizobium strains were determined by plate count and most-probable-number analyses. Preliminary experiments showed that survival of rhizobia was affected by each of these factors and their interactions. Results of further studies indicated that six strains of rhizobia survived better at high temperatures when lyophilized and suspended in an oil carrier as compared to finely ground peat. The oil base inocula contained ca. 105 viable rhizobia per g after 56 days of incubation at 60°C, whereas peat base inocula contained ≤10 rhizobia per g. These results suggest that an oil carrier will protect rhizobia from rapid death at usually lethal high temperatures.  相似文献   

5.
Strains of cowpea rhizobia grew in mannitol-amended, nonsterile soil at 29 to 35°C but not at 40°C. Little decline in numbers of these bacteria occurred in dry, nonsterile soil incubated at 42°C for 7 days. Strains of cowpea rhizobia differed widely in their tolerances to drying at 30°C in nonsterile and sterile soil, and from less than 1 to 50% of the bacteria were still viable after 11 days. No relation was evident between tolerance to desiccation and the degree of aridity of the site from which the bacteria were isolated or their growth rates in culture, but strains not producing extracellular polysaccharide were often more tolerant than those producing extracellular polysaccharide. It is suggested that desiccation-tolerant rhizobia be used for the production of legume inoculants.  相似文献   

6.
A field experiment was conducted to assess the response to inoculation with rhizobia in a clay loam soil of the Nile Delta using faba bean (Vicia faba) for two successive winter seasons (1985/6 and 1986/7). Three selected strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum, TAL 634, NRC 65 and TAL 1400, were used singly or in combination as peat-based inocula in 1985/6 winter season. Strain TAL 1400 was replaced by strain F9 in the 1986/7 winter season. A significant seed yield response was obtained only with strain TAL 1400, in the 1985/6 season. In the 1986/7 season, no significant yield response was observed with any of the strains. The serotyping of nodules collected in the 1985/6 season showed that strain TAL 1400 was more competitive than either the indigenous rhizobia or the two inoculant strains. However, the majority of nodules formed in the 1986/7 season were formed from strains other than the inoculant ones.  相似文献   

7.
Transfer of the Pea Symbiotic Plasmid pJB5JI in Nonsterile Soil   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Transfer of the pea (Pisum sativum L.) symbiotic plasmid pJB5JI between strains of rhizobia was examined in sterile and nonsterile silt loam soil. Sinorhizobium fredii USDA 201 and HH003 were used as plasmid donors, and symbiotic plasmid-cured Rhizobium leguminosarum 6015 was used as the recipient. The plasmid was carried but not expressed in S. fredii strains, whereas transfer of the plasmid to R. leguminosarum 6015 rendered the recipient capable of nodulating pea plants. Confirmation of plasmid transfer was obtained by acquisition of plasmid-encoded antibiotic resistance genes, nodulation of pea plants, and plasmid profiles. Plasmid transfer in nonsterile soil occurred at frequencies of up to 10−4 per recipient and appeared to be highest at soil temperatures and soil moisture levels optimal for rhizobial growth. Conjugation frequencies were usually higher in sterile soil than in nonsterile soil. In nonsterile soil, transconjugants were recovered only with strain USDA 201 as the plasmid donor. Increasing the inoculum levels of donor and recipient strains up to 109 cells g of soil−1 increased the number of transconjugants; peak plasmid transfer frequencies, however, were found at the lower inoculum level of 107 cells g of soil−1. Plasmid transfer frequencies were raised in the presence of the pea rhizosphere or by additions of plant material. Transconjugants formed by the USDA 201(pJB5JI) × 6015 mating in soil formed effective nodules on peas.  相似文献   

8.
Rhizobium strains used in inoculants for Trifolium spp., Medicago spp., Glycine max, and Lotus pedunculatus were isolated from nodules of these legumes grown in soils into which the rhizobia had been introduced 4 to 8 years before. Isolations were made from a total of 420 nodules. Nodule occupancy by the inoculant strains varied from 17.7% for a soybean strain to 100% in the case of L. pedunculatus whose specific rhizobia did not occur in the soils studied. In general, inoculant strains isolated from nodules did not differ in effectiveness from cultures of the same strains concurrently maintained in lyophilized form. The average effectiveness of all of the isolates (identified and unidentified) from a legume was 7.1 to 73.3% higher than that of the unidentified isolates alone, demonstrating the prolonged effect that a single-seed inoculation has on the rhizobial population in a soil which had not been planted with legumes before. Relatively weak recovery of a Rhizobium japonicum strain introduced into soil 4 years after soybean seed inoculated with a different strain had been planted in the same soil confirmed the advantage of a resident population over an introduced inoculant strain.  相似文献   

9.
Moawad  H.  Badr El-Din  S.M.S.  Abdel-Aziz  R.A. 《Plant and Soil》1998,204(1):95-106
The diversity of rhizobia nodulating common bean ( Phaseolus vulgaris), berseem clover (Trifolium alexanderinum) and lentil (Lens culinaris) was assessed using several characterization techniques, including nitrogen fixation efficiency, intrinsic antibiotic-resistance patterns (IAR), plasmid profiles, serological markers and rep-PCR fingerprinting. Wide diversity among indigenous rhizobial populations of the isolates from lentil, bean and clover was found. Strikingly, a large percentage of the indigenous rhizobial population was extremely poor at fixing nitrogen. This emphasizes the need to increase the balance of highly efficient strains within the rhizobial population. Use of high-quality inocula strains that survive and compete with other less-desired and less-efficient N2-fixing rhizobia represents the best approach to increase biological nitrogen fixation of the target legume. In field-grown lentils, the inoculant strains were not able to outcompete the indigenous rhizobia and the native lentil rhizobia occupied 76–88% of the total nodules formed on inoculated plants. Nitrogen fixation by lentils, estimated using the 15N isotope dilution technique, ranged between 127 to 139 kg ha-1 in both inoculated and un-inoculated plants. With berseem clover, the inoculant strains were highly competitive against indigenous rhizobia and occupied 52–79% of all nodules. Inoculation with selected inocula improved N2 fixation by clover from 162 to 205 kg ha-1 in the three cuts as compared with 118 kg ha-1 in the un-inoculated treatment. The results also indicated the potential for improvement of N2 fixation by beans through the application of efficient N2-fixing rhizobia.  相似文献   

10.
A dry granular inoculant of Rhizobium was prepared from sodium alginate and peralite. High numbers of two groundnut (Arachis hypogaea) Rhizobium strains, NC 92 and TAL 1000 used to prepare inoculants survived in dry granules beyond 180 days. The viable counts were 9.72 and 9.91 log10 rhizobia g-1 of dry granules for NC 92 and TAL 1000, respectively compared to 8.0 log10 rhizobia g-1 of peat inoculant for NC 92 at the end of six months storage. The granular inoculant was free from contaminants. In a pot culture experiment the granular inoculant applied to the soil gave similar results when seeds were dressed with a peat inoculant; nodulation and growth of groundnut were similar. The major advantage of this inoculant is that, it can be stored in a dry state without losing much viability.  相似文献   

11.
Survival of 4 cowpea Rhizobium strains, IRC291, MI-50A, JRW3 and JRC29, in two soil types (bauxitic silt loam and sandy clay loam) undergoing drying at 30°C and 37°C was examined. While all strains except JRW3 showed a general pattern of increase in their numbers during the first 3 weeks in sterile soils, none of the strains showed any increase in their population in non-sterile soils. Cowpea rhizobia showed better survival in non-sterile bauxitic silt loam than in clay loam soils at 30°C. However, the long-term survival (examined up to 6 months) of rhizobia in both soils was poor at 37°C as compared to 30°C. We also found that cowpea rhizobia survived better in soils undergoing drying than in moist soils at 30°C. Our results suggest that (a) cowpea rhizobia survived better in bauxitic silt loam than in clay loam soil and (b) the low indigenous cowpea rhizobial population in Jamaican soils may be due to their poor long-term survival and weak saprophytic competence.  相似文献   

12.
Inoculation of legumes under field conditions with superior nitrogen-fixing rhizobia does not always result in the desired yield increase. Often it is observed that the inoculum strain fails to occupy a significant proportion of the nodules. The introduced inoculant strains have to compete with the indigenous, often ineffective, nitrogen-fixing rhizobial population at different levels. The success of inoculation depends to a large extent on the ratio of the inoculant cells to indigenous rhizobia. However, intrinsic characteristics of the inoculant and indigenous rhizobia, and their responses to abiotic and biotic environmental variables, also influence the outcome of inoculation. In this review, the genetic basis for “efficient host-bacteria interaction” is reviewed. In addition, environmental factors that influence competition and saprophytic competence of rhizobia are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Indigenous rhizobia in soil present a competition barrier to the establishment of inoculant strains, possibly leading to inoculation failure. In this study, we used the natural diversity of rhizobial species and numbers in our fields to define, in quantitative terms, the relationship between indigenous rhizobial populations and inoculation response. Eight standardized inoculation trials were conducted at five well-characterized field sites on the island of Maui, Hawaii. Soil rhizobial populations ranged from 0 to over 3.5 × 104 g of soil-1 for the different legumes used. At each site, no less than four but as many as seven legume species were planted from among the following: soybean (Glycine max), lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus), cowpea (Vigna unguiculata), bush bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), peanut (Arachis hypogaea), Leucaena leucocephala, tinga pea (Lathyrus tingeatus), alfalfa (Medicago sativa), and clover (Trifolium repens). Each legume was (i) inoculated with an equal mixture of three effective strains of homologous rhizobia, (ii) fertilized at high rates with urea, or (iii) left uninoculated. For soybeans, a nonnodulating isoline was used in all trials as the rhizobia-negative control. Inoculation increased economic yield for 22 of the 29 (76%) legume species-site combinations. While the yield increase was greater than 100 kg ha-1 in all cases, in only 11 (38%) of the species-site combinations was the increase statistically significant (P ≤ 0.05). On average, inoculation increased yield by 62%. Soybean (G. max) responded to inoculation most frequently, while cowpea (V. unguiculata) failed to respond in all trials. Inoculation responses in the other legumes were site dependent. The response to inoculation and the competitive success of inoculant rhizobia were inversely related to numbers of indigenous rhizobia. As few as 50 rhizobia g of soil-1 eliminated inoculation response. When fewer than 10 indigenous rhizobia g of soil-1 were present, economic yield was significantly increased 85% of the time. Yield was significantly increased in only 6% of the observations when numbers of indigenous rhizobia were greater than 10 cells g of soil-1. A significant response to N application, significant increases in nodule parameters, and greater than 50% nodule occupancy by inoculant rhizobia did not necessarily coincide with significant inoculation responses. No less than a doubling of nodule mass and 66% nodule occupancy by inoculant rhizobia were required to significantly increase the yield of inoculated crops over that of uninoculated crops. However, lack of an inoculation response was common even when inoculum strains occupied the majority of nodules. In these trials, the symbiotic yield of crops was, on average, only 88% of the maximum yield potential, as defined by the fertilizer N treatment. The difference between the yield of N-fertilized crops and that of N2-fixing crops indicates a potential for improving inoculation technology, the N2 fixation capacity of rhizobial strains, and the efficiency of symbiosis. In this study, we show that the probability of enhancing yield with existing inoculation technology decreases dramatically with increasing numbers of indigenous rhizobia.  相似文献   

15.

Background and aims

Inoculation of legumes at sowing with rhizobia has arguably been one of the most cost-effective practices in modern agriculture. Critical aspects of inoculant quality are rhizobial counts at manufacture/registration and shelf (product) life.

Methods

In order to re-evaluate the Australian standards for peat-based inoculants, we assessed numbers of rhizobia (rhizobial counts) and presence of contaminants in 1,234 individual packets of peat–based inoculants from 13 different inoculant groups that were either freshly manufactured or had been stored at 4 °C for up to 38 months to determine (a) rates of decline of rhizobial populations, and (b) effects of presence of contaminants on rhizobial populations. We also assessed effects of inoculant age on survival of the rhizobia during and immediately after inoculation of polyethylene beads.

Results

Rhizobial populations in the peat inoculants at manufacture and decline rates varied substantially amongst the 13 inoculant groups. The most stable were Sinorhizobium, Bradyrhizobium and Mesorhizobium with Rhizobium, particularly R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii the least stable. The presence of contaminants at the 10?6 level of dilution, i.e. >log 6.7 g?1 peat, reduced rhizobial numbers in the stored inoculants by an average of 37 %. Survival on beads following inoculation improved 2–3 fold with increasing age of inoculant.

Conclusions

We concluded that the Australian standards for peat-based rhizobial inoculants should be reassessed to account for the large differences amongst the groups in counts at manufacture and survival rates during storage. Key recommendations are to increase expiry counts from log 8.0 to log 8.7 rhizobia g?1 peat and to have four levels of inoculant shelf life ranging from 12 months to 3 years.  相似文献   

16.
Mineral Soils as Carriers for Rhizobium Inoculants   总被引:5,自引:3,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Mineral soil-based inoculants of Rhizobium meliloti and Rhizobium phaseoli survived better at 4°C than at higher temperatures, but ca. 15% of the cells were viable at 37°C after 27 days. Soil-based inoculants of R. meliloti, R. phaseoli, Rhizobium japonicum, and a cowpea Rhizobium sp. applied to seeds of their host legumes also survived better at low temperatures, but the percent survival of such inoculants was higher than peat-based inoculants at 35°C. Survival of R. phaseoli, R. japonicum, and cowpea rhizobia was not markedly improved when the cells were suspended in sugar solutions before drying them in soil. Nodulation was abundant on Phaseolus vulgaris derived from seeds that had been coated with a soil-based inoculant and stored for 165 days at 25°C. The increase in yield and nitrogen content of Phaseolus angularis grown in the greenhouse was the same with soil-and peat-based inoculants. We suggest that certain mineral soils can be useful and readily available carriers for legume inoculants containing desiccation-resistant Rhizobium strains.  相似文献   

17.
A total of 103 rhizobial strains representing the cowpea miscellany and Rhizobium japonicum were studied with regard to growth rate, glucose metabolic pathways, and pH change in culture medium. Doubling times ranged from 1.4 ± 0.04 to 44.1 ± 5.2 h; although two populations of “fast-growing” and “slow-growing” rhizobia were noted, they overlapped and were not distinctly separated. Twenty-four strains which had doubling times of less than 8 h all showed NADP-linked 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6-PGD) activity, whereas only one slow-growing strain (doubling time, 10.8 ± 0.9 h) of all those tested showed 6-PGD activity. Doubling times among fast growers could not be explained solely by the presence or absence of 6-PGD activity (r2 = 0.14) because the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the Emden-Meyerhoff-Parnas pathway were operative in both 6-PGD-positive and 6-PGD-negative strains. Growth rate and pH change were unrelated to each other. Fast- or slow-growing strains were not associated with any particular legume species or group of species from which they were originally isolated, with the exception of Stylosanthes spp., all nine isolates of which were slow growers. We conclude that 6-PGD activity is a more distinctive characteristic among physiologically different groups of rhizobia than doubling times and that characterization of the cowpea rhizobia as slow-growing alkali producers is an invalid concept.  相似文献   

18.
The mutualism between legumes and nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria (rhizobia) is a key feature of many ecological and agricultural systems, yet little is known about how this relationship affects aboveground interactions between plants and herbivores. We investigated the effects of the rhizobia mutualism on the abundance of a specialized legume herbivore on soybean plants. In a field experiment, soybean aphid (Aphis glycines) abundances were measured on plants (Glycine max) that were either (1) treated with a commercial rhizobial inoculant, (2) associating solely with naturally occurring rhizobia, or (3) given nitrogen fertilizer. Plants associating with naturally occurring rhizobia strains exhibited lower aphid population densities compared to those inoculated with a commercial rhizobial preparation or given nitrogen fertilizer. Genetic analyses of rhizobia isolates cultured from field plants revealed that the commercial rhizobia strains were phylogenetically distinct from naturally occurring strains. Plant size, leaf nitrogen concentration, and nodulation density were similar among rhizobia-associated treatments and did not explain the observed differences in aphid abundance. Our results demonstrate that plant–rhizobia interactions influence plant resistance to insect herbivores and that some rhizobia strains confer greater resistance to their mutualist partners than do others.  相似文献   

19.
To improve the nitrogen fixation, legume crops are often inoculated with selected effective rhizobia. However, there is large variation in how well the inoculant strains compete with the indigenous microflora in soil. To assess the success of the inoculant, it is necessary to distinguish it from other, closely related strains. Methods used until now have generally been based either on fingerprinting methods or on the use of reporter genes. Nevertheless, these methods have their shortcomings, either because they do not provide sufficiently specific information on the identity of the inoculant strain, or because they use genetically modified organisms that need prior authorization to be applied in the field or other uncontained environments. Another possibility is to target a gene that is naturally present in the bacterial genomes. Here we have developed a method that is based on amplicon sequencing of the bacterial housekeeping gene rpoB, encoding the beta-subunit of the RNA polymerase, which has been proposed as an alternative to the 16S rRNA gene to study the diversity of rhizobial populations in soils. We evaluated the method under laboratory and field conditions. Peanut seeds were inoculated with various Bradyrhizobium strains. After nodule development, DNA was extracted from selected nodules and the nodulating rhizobia were analysed by amplicon sequencing of the rpoB gene. The analyses of the sequence data showed that the method reliably identified bradyrhizobial strains in nodules, at least at the species level, and could be used to assess the competitiveness of the inoculant compared to other bradyrhizobia.  相似文献   

20.
The symbiotic and competitive performances of two highly effective rhizobia nodulating French bean P. vulgaris were studied in silty loam and clayey soils. The experiments were carried out to address the performance of two rhizobia strains (CE3 and Ph. 163] and the mixture thereof with the two major cultivated bean cultivars in two soil types from major growing French bean areas in Egypt. Clay and silty loam soils from Menoufia and Ismailia respectively were planted with Bronco and Giza 6 phaseolus bean cultivars. The data obtained from this study indicated that rhizobial inoculation of Giza 6 cultivar in clayey soil showed a positive response to inoculation in terms of nodule numbers and dry weight. This response was also positive in dry matter and biomass accumulation by the plants. The inoculant of strain CE3 enhanced plant growth and N-uptake relative to Ph. 163. However, the mixed inoculant strains were not always as good as single strain inoculants. The competition for nodulation was assessed using two techniques namely fluorescent antibody testing (FA) and REP-PCR fingerprinting. The nodule occupancy by inoculant strain Ph. 163 in both soils occupied 30-40% and 38-50 of nodules of cultivar Bronco. The mixed inocula resulted in higher proportions of nodules containing CE3 in silty loam soil and Ph. 163 in clayey soil. The native rhizobia occupied at least 50% of the nodules on the Bronco cultivar. For cultivar Giza 6, the native rhizobia were more competitive with the inoculant strains. Therefore, we suggest using the studied strains as commercial inocula for phaseolus bean.  相似文献   

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