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1.
The effects of kanamycin and streptomycin added to soil on the survival of transposon Tn5 modified Pseudomonas fluorescens strain R2f were investigated. Kanamycin in high (180 g g-1 dry soil) or low (18 g g-1) concentration or streptomycin in low concentration in Ede loamy sand soil had no noticeable effect on inoculant population dynamics in soil and wheat rhizosphere, whereas streptomycin in high concentration had a consistent significant stimulatory effect, in particular in the wheat rhizosphere. Streptomycin exerted its effect by selecting P. fluorescens with Tn5 insertion whilst suppressing the unmodified sensitive parent strain, as evidenced by comparing the behaviour of these two strains in separate and mixed inoculation studies.Soil textural type influenced the effect of streptomycin on the Tn5 carrying inoculant; the effect was consistently detected in rhizosphere and rhizoplane samples of wheat grown in Ede loamy sand after 7 and 14 days incubation, whereas it was only apparent after 7 days in rhizoplane or rhizosphere (and bulk soil) samples of wheat grown in two silt loam soils. Modification of soil pH by the addition of CaCO3 or bentonite clay resulted in an enhancement of the selective effect of streptomycin by CaCO3 and its abolishment by bentonite clay.The addition to soil of malic acid or wheat root exudate, but not of glucose, enhanced the streptomycin selective effect on the Tn5-modified P. fluorescens strain. Neither the streptomycin producer Streptomyces griseus nor two non-inhibiting mutants obtained following UV irradiation affected the dynamics of P. fluorescens (chr::Tn5) in soil and wheat rhizosphere.The effect of streptomycin in soil on inoculant Tn5 carrying bacteria depends on conditions such as soil type, the presence of (wheat) root exudates and the type of available substrate.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
 The growth responses of lentil (Lens esculenta L. cv. Laird) and two wheat cultivars (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Laura and Neepawa) to Glomus clarum NT4 in soil containing indigenous arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and fertilized with phosphorus at different (0, 5, 10, 20 ppm) levels was studied in a growth chamber. Soil was inoculated with a monospecific culture of G. clarum NT4 to provide an inoculant:indigenous AMF ratio of ca. 1 : 100. The shoot and root growth, and AMF colonization levels of NT4-inoculated lentil were significantly (P≤0.05) greater than the appropriate control plants in the unfertilized soil at 48 days after planting (DAP). At 95 DAP, NT4 inoculation had significantly increased the shoot dry weight (P≤0.08) and AMF colonization (P≤0.05) of lentil plants receiving 5 mg P kg–1 soil, whereas 20 mg P kg–1 soil reduced the shoot growth of NT4-inoculated plants. The NT4 inoculant had no effect (P≤0.05) on shoot P content, but increased (P≤0.08) the P-use efficiency of lentil plants receiving 5 mg P kg–1 soil. In contrast to the inoculant's effect on lentil, NT4 generally had no positive effect on any of the parameters assessed for wheat cv. Laura at any P level at 48 or 95 DAP. Similarly, there was no positive effect of NT4 on shoot or root growth, or AMF colonization of wheat cv. Neepawa plants at any P level at 48 DAP. However, NT4 inoculation increased the grain yield of Neepawa by 20% (P≤0.05) when fertilized with 20 mg P kg–1 soil. This yield increase was associated with a significant (P≤0.05) reduction in root biomass and a significant (P≤0.05) increase in the grain P content of inoculated plants. Thus, NT4 appears to have a preference for the Neepawa cultivar. Our results show that lentil was more dependent on mycorrhizae than wheat and responded to an AMF inoculant even in soil containing high levels of indigenous AMF. It might, therefore, be possible to develop mixed inoculants containing rhizobia and AMF for field production of legumes. Accepted: 22 February 1997  相似文献   

4.
One rape (Brassica napus cv. Wesroona) plant and four cotton (Gossypium hirsutum cv. Sicot 3) plants were grown in plastic cells containing soil labelled with 407 kBq of33P g−1 soil. After 5–8 days of growth, the33P depletion zones of all plants were autoradiographed and33P uptake by plants was measured. The autoradiographs were scanned with a microdensitometer and the optical densities at several places within the33P depletion zones of roots were obtained. The volume of soil explored by root hairs was estimated from measurements of root diameters and lengths of roots and root hairs. About half of the total33P depleted by cotion roots came from outside the root hair cylinder whereas most of33P taken up by rape was from within the root hair cylinder. Plants grown in a macrostructured soil may have roots growing in voids, within aggregates or on the surfaces of aggregates. The results of this study demonstrate that root hairs have a strong influence on the accessibility of phosphorus to roots in such a soil, and thus on the phosphorus nutrition of plants.  相似文献   

5.
In order to evaluate the suitability ofAzospirillum spp. as a crop inoculant in temperate regions, the natural occurrence, distribution and survival ofAzospirillum after seed inoculation in Belgian agricultural soils was studied.Azospirillum was present in most of the fields examined, but concentrations never exceeded 1000 cfu per g soil or per g roots. Under field conditions none of the known species was found to be localized inside the roots of barley, wheat, rye, maize or grasses. Also, the distribution ofA. brasilense SpBr 14 within the root system of hydroponic-grown wheat was studied by immunofluorescence. From the rhizosphere samples of the field crops investigated, a number of microaërophilic, diazotrophic bacteria were isolated and identified asA. lipoferum, found only on maize and grass roots, andA. brasilense, present under all crops. In contrast toA. brasilense, A. lipoferum was able to use different amino-acids and some derivatives as sole carbon and nitrogen sources. Use of a peat-based seed inoculant resulted in the establishment of theAzospirillum spp. in the rhizosphere of field-grown winter barley and winter wheat. The established population survived during winter without appreciable change in numbers, but there was no indication of active growth during spring or summer.  相似文献   

6.
S. N. Rai  A. C. Gaur 《Plant and Soil》1988,109(1):131-134
Out of ten isolates ofAzospirillum spp. isolated from the root and rhizosphere of wheat plant, seven belonged toA. brasilense and three belonged toA. lipoferum. All eight isolates ofAzotobacter spp. belonged toAzotobacter chroococcum. Two strains, one fromA. lipoferum and another fromA. chroococcum having high nitrogen fixing capacity with negative test for denitrification were used as inoculant to supplement the nitrogen need of wheat crop. Significant increases in the yield of wheat grain and uptake of nitrogen by the crop over the control were found in pot tests when the seeds were inoculated either withAzospirillum spp. orAzotobacter spp. or the combination of both the inoculants.  相似文献   

7.
Recent microscopic evidence acquired using strain-specific monoclonal antibodies and specific gene probes confirms earlier claims that some strains of Azospirillum lipoferum and A. brasilense, but not others, are capable of infecting the interior of wheat roots. The present study was performed to determine whether this strain specificity in the infection of the interior of wheat roots was apparent in the first 24 h of adsorption (`anchoring') of Azospirillum cells to the root surface. Strains of A. brasilense, originally isolated from surface-sterilised wheat roots (Sp 245, Sp 107) or with a proven ability to infect the interior of wheat roots (Sp 245), showed no greater ability to anchor to the roots than other Azospirillum strains isolated from the wheat rhizosphere (Sp 246) or from the rhizosphere or rhizosphere soil of other gramineae (Sp 7, Cd, S 82). The SEM images showed that at the root tip the Azospirillum cells were principally located in cracks between epidermal cells. In the root hair zone the bacteria were more numerous but again principally located in the depressions between epidermal cells. In all zones of the roots mucilage was present, and near the tip this appeared to have been partially digested, forming `halos' around the bacteria and revealing fibril-like strands attached to the bacteria. Subsequent studies were conducted using a technique originally developed for investigating competition of rhizobia for adsorption sites on legume roots. In the adaptation of this technique it was found that the presence of any significant concentration of Ca++ in the incubation medium reduced bacterial adsorption, as did concentrations of (PO4)3- above 50 mM. The influence of the pH of the incubation medium on the adsorption of ten different strains of Azospirillum showed, that with one exception, strains isolated from the roots or rhizosphere of wheat showed optimum adsorption at pH 6.0, and all other strains pH 7.0. Apart from this effect of pH no differences in adsorption were detected between strains with a proven capacity to infect wheat roots and those unable to do so. However, strains varied in their capability to compete for adsorption sites, there being a tendency for strains with a proven capacity to invade the internal tissues of wheat roots to be more competitive for adsorption sites.  相似文献   

8.
Three strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum, I17, 110, and 61A76, were evaluated for their ability to form nodules on field-grown soybeans in soil with a highly competitive indigenous B. japonicum population. The predominant indigenous strain, 0336, in the field site used was unlike the more common isolates from Midwestern soils which belong to the 123 or 138 serogroups. This strain persisted in the soil for at least 30 years without any soybean crops. The three inoculant strains differed in their ability to compete with indigenous strains for nodule formation. Four different inoculation treatments were tested in three adjacent fields. When the amount of inoculum was increased, a higher proportion of nodules contained the inoculant strain. The most competitive inoculant strain was I17, a recent field isolate. Strain 61A76 was better than 110. There was no difference in recovery of the inoculant strains on the Hodgson or Corsoy soybean cultivars, nor was there a difference in recovery of the inoculant strains during the growing season. The vertical distribution of nodules containing the inoculant strains was affected by the method of adding the inoculant to the soil. Inoculant added to the seed furrow produced nodules mainly in the top region of the soybean root. Inoculant tilled into the soil produced nodules primarily in the bottom part of the root. The nodules that were produced in the bottom part of the root are younger and may contribute significant amounts of fixed nitrogen to the soybean during seed formation.  相似文献   

9.
The survival and development of two inoculant ectomycorrhizal fungi (Hebeloma westraliense Bough. Tom. and Mal. and Setchelliogaster sp. nov.) on roots of outplanted Eucalyptus globulus Labill. was examined at two expasture field sites in the south-west of Western Australia. Site 1 was a gravelly yellow duplex soil, and Site 2 was a yellow sandy earth. Plants were grown in steamed or unsteamed soil, in root bags designed as field containers for young growing trees. Three, 6 and 12 months after outplanting, plants were removed from these bags and assessed for dry weights of shoots and ectomycorrhizal colonization of roots.The inoculant ectomycorrhizal fungi (identified on the basis of the colour and morphology of their mycorrhizas) survived on roots of E. globulus for at least 12 months after outplanting at both field sites. At Site 1, however, colonization of new fine roots by the inoculant fungi was low (less than 20% of fine root length). Inoculation had no effect on the growth of E. globulus at this site. In contrast, at Site 2 the inoculant ectomycorrhizal fungi colonized up to 30–50% of new fine root length during the first 6 months after outplanting. There was a corresponding growth response to ectomycorrhizal inoculation at this site, with a close relationship (r2=0.82**) between plant growth at 12 months and root colonization at 3 months. Plant growth at 12 months was related less closely with root colonization at 6 or 12 months. Root colonization by resident ectomycorrhizal fungi increased with time at both field sites. At Site 2, this increase appeared to be at the expense of colonization by the inoculant fungi, which was reduced to less than 10% of fine root length at 12 months. Steaming the soil had little effect on colonization by the inoculant ectomycorrhizal fungi at either field site, but decreased colonization by the resident ectomycorrhizal fungi.  相似文献   

10.
Antibiosis has been thought to impart a competitive advantage to soil microorganisms. A rhizobacterium of the genus Pseudomonas produces a toxin that inhibits the growth of other microorganisms and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). The bacterium was mutagenized with the Tn5 transposon to obtain toxin-negative (Tox-) mutants or was selected for its spontaneous resistance to rifampicin. Tox- mutants were used to determine the role of the toxin in wheat root inhibition, root colonization, and rhizosphere competitiveness. Four Tox- (loss of inhibition of both E. coli and wheat root growth) and four partial Tox+ (partial loss of inhibition of E. coli and wheat root growth) Tn5 mutants were isolated. Seven of the mutants had different Tn5 chromosomal insertions, which suggests that toxin production is the result of several gene loci. Competitive root-colonization abilities of the Tox- isolates were studied in winter wheat rhizospheres using varied population levels in autoclaved and nonautoclaved soil. Toxin production did not affect the competitive abilities of these organisms with native soil microflora. Results here indicate that toxin production by these organisms is not the primary mechanism of their competitive advantage in root colonization. Thus, opportunities exist for biological control of plant-suppressive bacteria using these Tox- strains.  相似文献   

11.
Competition from native soil rhizobia is likely to be an important factor limiting Phaseolus vulgaris L. inoculant response in Latin America. We used UMR 1116, a nod + fix natural mutant of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv phaseoli strain CC511, as a reference strain to study competition for nodulation sites in this species. When P. vulgaris cv Carioca was planted in soils containing different proportions of UMR 1116 and the effective and competitive strain UMR 1899, UMR 1116 occupied more than 50% of the nodules at all inoculant ratios tested, though increasing the proportion of UMR 1899 in the inoculant did enhance the number and percentage of effective nodules and plant dry weight. Sixty two strains of bean rhizobia were tested in competition with UMR 1116. An inoculant ratio of 1:1 was used, with all strains applied to the soil rather than to seeds. Strains varied in the number and percentage of effective nodules produced in competition with UMR 1116, and in plant dry weight, and there was a strong correlation between variation in each of these traits and plant N accumulation. Seven of the strains (UMR 1073, 1084, 1102, 1125, 1165, 1378 and 1384) were identified as both superior in competitive ability and active in N2 fixation. Site of placement of the inoculant and ambient temperature influenced strain response.Journal paper 16736, Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA  相似文献   

12.
The survival ofHerbaspirillum spp. cells added directly or encapsulated in alginate beads and colonization of wheat roots was evaluated in soil microcosms. Cells entrapped in alginate in the presence of JNFb-broth and introduced into unplanted non-sterile clay loamy and sandy soils survived better than cells added directly to the same soils after 50 d incubation. On amendment by JNFb broth and/or skim milk the entrapped cells survived better than those prepared in water. Encapsulated cells survived better in a heavier textured soil (clay-loamy) than in a lighter (sandy) soil. Wheat plants growing in microcosms inoculated with various bead types from day 0 to day 30 exhibited high levels of histosphere colonization, nitrogenase activity (in situ) measured by acetylene reduction assay, plant dry mass and total N content but no symptoms of mottled stripe disease were observed. Comparable results of growth criteria and nitrogenase activity, but relatively lower bacterial populations, were obtained with wheat grown for 45 d after the inoculant had been introduced into the soil with different bead types.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The hydraulic resistivity ofVicia faba L. roots grown in soil was estimated from steady state measurements of transpiration rate and leaf and soil water potentials. Root and stem axial resistivities, estimated from xylem vessel radii, were negligible. Root radial resistivity was estimated to be 1.3×1012 sm−1. This root radial resistivity value was used to estimate, root resistance to water uptake for a field crop ofVicia faba. Previously published results were used for root distribution and soil water contents at the drained upper limit (DUL) and the lower limit (LL) of extractable soil water. Soil resistance to water uptake was estimated from single root theory using the steady rate solution. At the DUL, root resistance was about 105 times greater than soil resistance. At the LL, soil resistance exceeded root resistance for depths less than 0.3 m, but for depths greater than this soil resistance was smaller than root resistance. Estimates of possible uptake rates at given leaf water potentials indicated that overall soil resistance had a negligible influence upon uptake, even at the LL. The reliability of this result is examined in detail. It is concluded that over the complete range of extractable soil water contents soil resistanceper se would not have limited water use by this crop. This conclusion may also be valid for a wide range of soil and crop combinations.  相似文献   

14.
While the rhizosphere presents a different chemical, physical and biological environment to bulk soil, most experimental and modelling investigations of plant growth and productivity are based on bulk soil parameters. In this study, water and nutrient acquisition by wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) roots was investigated using rhizosphere- and root-system-scale modelling. The physical and chemical properties of rhizosphere soil could be influenced by phospholipid surfactants in the root mucilage. Two models were compared: a 2-dimensional (2D) Finite Element Method rhizosphere model, and a 3-dimensional (3D) root architecture model, ROOTMAP. ROOTMAP was parameterised to reproduce the results of the detailed 2D model, and was modified to include a rhizosphere soil volume. Lecithin (a phospholipid surfactant) could be exuded into the rhizosphere soil volume, decreasing soil water content and hydraulic conductivity at any given soil water potential, and decreasing phosphate adsorption to soil particles. The rhizosphere-scale modelling (5 × 5 mm2 soil area, 10 mm root length, uptake over 12 h) predicted a reduction in water uptake (up to 16% at 30 kPa) and an increase in phosphate uptake (up to 4%) with lecithin exudation into the rhizosphere, but little effect on nitrate uptake, with only a small reduction in dry soil (1.6% at 200 kPa). The 3D root model reproduced the water (y = 1.013x, R2 = 0.996), nitrate (y = 1x, R2 = 1) and phosphate (y = 0.978x, R2 = 0.998) uptake predictions of the rhizosphere model, providing confidence that a whole root system model could reproduce the dynamics simulated by a Finite Element Method rhizosphere model. The 3D root architecture model was then used to scale-up the rhizosphere dynamics, simulating the effect of lecithin exudation on water, nitrate and phosphate acquisition by a wheat root system, growing over 41 d. When applied to growing and responsive roots, lecithin exudation increased P acquisition by up to 13% in nutrient-rich, and 49% in relatively nutrient-poor soil. A comparison of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.) root architectures, suggested an interaction between the P acquisition benefit of rhizosphere lecithin and root architecture, with the more highly-branched wheat root structure acquiring relatively more P in the presence of lecithin than the sparsely-branched lupin root system.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Two experiments were performed to examine the effects of inoculation of field grown wheat with various Azospirillum strains. In the first experiment the soil was sterilized with methyl bromide to reduce the Azospirillum population and15N labelled fertilizer was added to all treatments. Two strains ofAzospirillum brasilense isolated from surface sterilized wheat roots and theA. brasilense type strain Sp7 all produced similar increases in grain yield and N content. From the15N and acetylene reduction data it was apparent that these increases were not due to N2 fixation. In the second experiment performed in the same (unsterilized) soil, twoA. brasilense strains (Sp245, Sp246) and oneA. amazonense strain (Am YTr), all isolated from wheat roots, produced responses of dry matter and N content while the response to the strain Sp7 was much smaller. These data confirm earlier results which indicate that if natural Azospirillum populations in the soil are high (the normal situation under Brazilian conditions), strains which are isolated from wheat roots are better able to produce inoculation responses than strains isolated from other sources. The inoculation of a nitrate reductase negative mutant of the strain Sp245 produced only a very small inoculation response in wheat. This suggests that the much greater inoculation response of the original strain was not due to N2 fixation but to an increased nitrate assimilation due to the nitrate reductase activity of the bacteria in the roots. Consultant Inter-American Institute for Cooperation in Agriculture IICA/EMBRAPA World Bank Project.  相似文献   

16.
Survival and nitrogenase efficiency ofNostoc commune andN. austinii were evaluated monthly in four carrier materials (sugarcane bagasse, wheat straw, wheat bran and peat) at 10, 30 and 40 °C. Survival, as well as nitrogenase activity, of both species was much better in peat, followed by wheat bran, sugarcane bagasse than in wheat straw at 10 and 30 °C up to three months, the activity ofN. commune being better thanN. austinii. None of the materials tested was found to be superior to peat as carrier ofNostoc species but the results indicated that wheat bran and sugarcane bagasse can be used as inoculant carriers with relative success. Storage of inoculants in these carriers is feasible at 30 °C up to three months.  相似文献   

17.
Inter-root movement and dispersion of the beneficial bacterium Azospirillum brasilense were monitored in root systems of wheat seedlings growing in the field and in growth chamber soil trays. Two strains were used, a motile wild-type strain (Cd, mot+) and a motility deficient strain (mot), which was derived from the Cd strain. Root colonization by two wild-type strains (Cd and Sp-245) was studied in 64 plant species growing in pots in the greenhouse. The two wild-type strains of A. brasilense were capable of colonizing all tested plant species. In soil trays and in the field, mot+ cells moved from inoculated roots to non-inoculated roots of either wheat plants or weeds growing in the same field plot, but the mot strain did not move toward non-inoculated roots of either plant species. In the field, both mot+ and mot strains of A. brasilense survived well in the rhizosphere of wheat for 30 days, but only mot+ moved between different weeds, regardless of the species, botanical family, or whether they were annuals or perennials. In plant-free, water-saturated soils, either in columns or in the field, both strains remained at the inoculation site and did not move.It is proposed (a) that A. brasilense is not a plant-specific bacterium and that (b) colonization of the entire root system in soil is an active process determined by bacterial motility; it is not plant specific, but depends on the presence of plants. Correspondence to: Y. Bashan  相似文献   

18.
Summary Selected streptomycin resistant strains ofRhizobium leguminosarum suspended in nutrient broth were added to the planting furrow immediately before the sowing of pea. The nodule occupancy by a strain isolated from Risø soil (Risø la) was increased from 74 to 90%, when the inoculum rate was increased from 3.7×106 to 3.7×108 cells per cm row. The experimental soil contained 103 to 104 cells ofR. leguminosarum per gram. An almost inefficient strain isolated from Risø soil (SV10) was less competitive with respect to nodulation on two pea cultivars than an efficient Risø strain (SV15) and an efficient non-Risø strain (R1045). The nodule occupancy by the introduced strains varied between pea cultivars.Irrespective of the generally high nodulation by the efficient strains introduced to the soil, the pea seed yield, compared to pea nodulated by the indigenous population, was not significantly increased. Neither were two commercial inoculants, applied in rates corresponding to 3 times the recommended rate, able to increase the yield. This suggests that the indigenous populations ofR. leguminosarum were sufficient in number and nitrogen fixing capacity to ensure an optimal pea crop. However, some inoculation treatments slightly increased the seed N concentration and total N accumulation, indicating that it may be possible to select or develop bacterial strains that may increase the yield.  相似文献   

19.
Development and function ofAzospirillum-inoculated roots   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Summary The surface distribution ofAzospirillum on inoculated roots of maize and wheat is generally similar to that of other members of the rhizoplane microflora. During the first three days, colonization takes place mainly on the root elongation zone, on the base of root hairs and, to a lesser extent, on the surface of young root hairs.Azospirillum has been found in cortical tissues, in regions of lateral root emergence, along the inner cortex, inside xylem vessels and between pith cells. Inoculation of several cultivars of wheat, corn, sorghum and setaria with several strains ofAzospirillum caused morphological changes in root starting immediately after germination. Root length and surface area were differentially affected according to bacterial age and inoculum level. During the first three weeks after germination, the number of root hairs, root hair branches and lateral roots was increased by inoculation, but there was no change in root weight. Root biomass increased at later stages. Cross-sections of inoculated corn and wheat root showed an irregular arrangement of cells in the outer layers of the cortex. These effects on plant morphology may be due to the production of plant growth-promoting substances by the colonizing bacteria or by the plant as a reaction to colonization. Pectic enzymes may also be involved. Morphological changes had a physiological effect on inoculated roots. Specific activities of oxidative enzymes, and lipid and suberin content, were lower in extracts of inoculated roots than in uninoculated controls. This suggests that inoculated roots have a larger proportion of younger roots. The rate of NO 3, K+ and H2PO 4 uptake was greater in inoculated seedlinds. In the field, dry matter, N, P and K accumulated at faster rates, and water content was higher inAzospirillum-inoculated corn, sorghum, wheat and setaria. The above improvements in root development and function lead in many cases to higher crop yield.  相似文献   

20.
A pot experiment was conducted in the green house to investigate the establishment of phosphate solubilizing strains of Azotobacter chroococcum, including soil isolates and their mutants, in the rhizosphere and their effect on growth parameters and root biomass of three genetically divergent wheat cultivars (Triticum aestivum L.). Five fertilizer treatments were performed: Control, 90 kg N ha—1, 90 kg N + 60 kg P2O5 ha—1, 120 kg N ha—1 and 120 kg N + 60 kg P2O5 ha—1. Phosphate solubilizing and phytohormone producing parent soil isolates and mutant strains of A. chroococcum were isolated and selected by an enrichment method. In vitro phosphate solubilization and growth hormone production by mutant strains was increased compared with soil isolates. Seed inoculation of wheat varieties with P solubilizing and phytohormone producing A. chroococcum showed better response compared with controls. Mutant strains of A. chroococcum showed higher increase in grain (12.6%) and straw (11.4%) yield over control and their survival (12—14%) in the rhizosphere as compared to their parent soil isolate (P4). Mutant strain M37 performed better in all three varieties in terms of increase in grain yield (14.0%) and root biomass (11.4%) over control.  相似文献   

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