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1.
Rhizobia are a well-known group of soil bacteria that establish symbiotic relationship with leguminous plants, fix atmospheric nitrogen, and improve soil fertility. To fulfill multiple duties in soil, rhizobia are elaborated with a large and complex multipartite genome composed of several replicons. The genetic material is divided among various replicons, in a way to cope with, and satisfy the diverse functions of rhizobia. In addition to the main chromosome, which is carrying the essential (core) genes required for sustaining cell life, the rhizobia genomes contain several extra-chromosomal plasmids, carrying the nonessential (accessory) genes. Occasionally, some mega-plasmids, denoted as secondary chromosomes or chromids, carry some essential (core) genes. Furthermore, specific accessory gene sequences (the symbiotic chromosomal islands) are incorporated in the main chromosome of some rhizobia species in Bradyrhizobium and Mesorhizobium genera. Plasmids in rhizobia are of variable sizes. All of the plasmids in a Rhizobium cell constitute about 30–50% of the genome. Rhizobia plasmids have specific characters such as miscellaneous genes, independent replication system, self-transmissibility, and instability. The plasmids regulate several cellular metabolic functions and enable the host rhizobia to survive in diverse habitats and even under stress conditions. Symbiotic plasmids in rhizobia are receiving increased attention because of their significance in the symbiotic nitrogen fixation process. They carry the symbiotic (nod, nif and fix) genes, and some non-symbiotic genes. Symbiotic plasmids are conjugally-transferred by the aid of the non-symbiotic, self-transmissible plasmids, and hence, brings about major changes in the symbiotic interactions and host specificity of rhizobia. Besides, the rhizobia cells harbor one or more accessory, non-symbiotic plasmids, carrying genes regulating various metabolic functions, rhizosphere colonization, and nodulation competitiveness. The entire rhizobia-plasmid pool interacting in harmony and provides rhizobia with substantial abilities to fulfill their complex symbiotic and non-symbiotic functions in variable environments. The above concepts are extensively reviewed and fairly discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus L.) is an important legume species that establishes symbiosis with rhizobia, mainly of the Bradyrhizobium genus. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficiency of rhizobia of the genus Bradyrhizobium in symbiosis with lima bean, in both Leonard jars and in pots with a Latossolo Amarelo distrófico (Oxisol). In the experiment in Leonard jars, 17 strains isolated from nodules of the three legume subfamilies, Papilionoideae (Vigna unguiculata, Pterocarpus sp., Macroptilium atropurpureum, Swartzia sp., and Glycine max), Mimosoideae (Inga sp.), and Caesalpinioideae (Campsiandra surinamensis) and two uninoculated controls, one with a low concentration (5.25 mg L?1) and another with a high concentration (52.5 mg L?1) of mineral nitrogen (N) were evaluated. The six strains that exhibited the highest efficiency in Leonard jars, isolated from nodules of Vigna unguiculata (UFLA 03–144, UFLA 03–84, and UFLA 03–150), Campsiandra surinamensis (INPA 104A), Inga sp. (INPA 54B), and Swartzia sp. (INPA 86A), were compared to two uninoculated controls, one without and another with 300 mg N dm?3 (NH4NO3) applied to pots with samples of an Oxisol in the presence and absence of liming. In this experiment, liming did not affect nodulation and plant growth; the INPA 54B and INPA 86A strains stood out in terms of shoot dry matter production and provided increases of approximately 48% in shoot N accumulation compared to the native rhizobia populations. Our study is the first to indicate Bradyrhizobium strains isolated from the three legume subfamilies are able to promote lima bean growth via biological nitrogen fixation in soil conditions.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The physiological action of the MOD-19 polysaccharide (PS), synthesized similarly to bacterial glucans, on the nodule bacteria Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae and pea seeds was studied. It was found that MOD-19 stimulated nodule bacterium growth and bacterial biomass accumulation. It also altered metabolism in rhizobia grown in solid and liquid media containing this polymer. Treatment of pea seeds with MOD-19 before sowing increased the intensity of root formation, plant tissue peroxidase activity, and general symbiosis efficiency owing to secondary nodule formation on lateral roots and prolongation of their intense nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

5.

BACKGROUND

Microbes affect the growth of plants. In this study, the diversity and plant growth-supporting activities of wheat rhizospheric bacteria were examined.

METHODS

Sampling was performed thrice at different phases of plant growth. Microbes associated with the rhizoplane of three wheat varieties (Seher, Lasani, and Faisalabad) were cultured and assessed for their plant growth-promoting abilities based on auxin production, hydrogen cyanide production, phosphate solubilization, and nitrogen fixation.

RESULTS

Bacterial load (CFU/mL) declined, and the succession of bacterial diversity occurred as the plants aged. Most auxin-producing bacteria and the highest concentrations of auxin (77 μg/mL) were observed during the second sampling point at the tillering stage. The Seher variety harbored the most auxin-producing as well as phosphate-solubilizing bacteria. Most of the bacteria belonged to Bacillus and Pseudomonas. Planomicrobium, Serratia, Rhizobium, Brevundimonas, Stenotrophomonas, and Exiguobacterium sp. were also found.

CONCLUSION

These results suggest that the rhizoplane microbiota associated with higher-yield plant varieties have better plant growth-promoting abilities as compared to the microbiota associated with lower-yield plant varieties.
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6.
It has been forecast that the challenge of meeting increased food demand and protecting environmental quality will be won or lost in maize, rice and wheat cropping systems, and that the problem of environmental nitrogen enrichment is most likely to be solved by substituting synthetic nitrogen fertilizers by the creation of cereal crops that are able to fix nitrogen symbiotically as legumes do. In legumes, rhizobia present intracellularly in membrane-bound vesicular compartments in the cytoplasm of nodule cells fix nitrogen endosymbiotically. Within these symbiosomes, membrane-bound vesicular compartments, rhizobia are supplied with energy derived from plant photosynthates and in return supply the plant with biologically fixed nitrogen, usually as ammonia. This minimizes or eliminates the need for inputs of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers. Recently we have demonstrated, using novel inoculation conditions with very low numbers of bacteria, that cells of root meristems of maize, rice, wheat and other major non-legume crops, such as oilseed rape and tomato, can be intracellularly colonized by the non-rhizobial, non-nodulating, nitrogen fixing bacterium,Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus that naturally occurs in sugarcane.G. diazotrophicus expressing nitrogen fixing (nifH) genes is present in symbiosome-like compartments in the cytoplasm of cells of the root meristems of the target cereals and non-legume crop species, somewhat similar to the intracellular symbiosome colonization of legume nodule cells by rhizobia. To obtain an indication of the likelihood of adequate growth and yield, of maize for example, with reduced inputs of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, we are currently determining the extent to which nitrogen fixation, as assessed using various methods, is correlated with the extent of systemic intracellular colonization byG. diazotrophicus, with minimal or zero inputs.  相似文献   

7.
The rhizobia are a group of bacteria widely studied for their capacity to form intimate symbiotic relationships with leguminous plants. However, they are also interesting for containing a remarkable abundance of repetitive genetic elements, such as long DNA repeats. In this study we deeply analyzed long, exact DNA repeats in five representative rhizobial genomes; Rhizobium etli, Rhizobium leguminosarum, Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Sinorhizobium meliloti and Mesorhizobium loti. The results suggest that a huge proportion of repeats can be located in either plasmid or chromosome replicons, except in B. japonicum, which lacks plasmids, but contains the largest number, and longest repeat elements of the genomes analyzed here. Interestingly, we detected a slight correlation between the density of repeats (either number or length) and genome size. As expected, the highest percentage of DNA repeats code for mobile genetic elements, including insertion sequences, recombinases, and transposases. Some repeats corresponded to non-coding or intergenic regions, while in genomes like that of R. etli, a significant percentage of large repeats, mainly located in plasmids, were strongly associated with symbiotic and nitrogen fixation activities. In conclusion, our analysis shows that rhizobial genomes contain a high density of long DNA repeats, which might facilitate recombination events and genome rearrangements, functioning in adaption and persistence during saprophytic or symbiotic life.  相似文献   

8.
A facultative methylotrophic bacterium, strain Lp-1, which was isolated from root nodules of lupine (Lupinus polyphyllus L.) on the medium with methanol as a carbon and energy source, exhibited high similarity of the 16S rRNA gene sequences to Delftia strains (94?99.9%). The cells of Delftia sp. Lp-1 were motile gram-negative rods dividing by binary fission. Predominant fatty acids were C16:0 (34.2%), C16:1ω9 (14.5%), and C18:1ω7c (17.3%). Phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine, and phosphatidylglycerol were the dominant phospholipids. Q8 was the major ubiquinone. Optimal growth occurred at 24?26°C and pH 7.1?7.3; growth was inhibited by 1% NaCl. The organism oxidized methanol with the classical methanol dehydrogenase and used the ribulose bisphosphate pathway of C1 metabolism. Analysis of translated amino acid sequence of the large subunit of the MxaF methanol dehydrogenase revealed 85.5?94% similarity to the sequences of such autotrophic methylotrophs of the class Alphaproteobacteria as Angulomicrobium, Starkeya, and Ancylobacter, indicating the possible acquisition of the mxaF gene via horizontal gene transfer. Delftia sp. Lp-1 (VKM B-3039, DSM 24446), the first methylotrophic member of the genus Delftia, was shown to be a plant symbiont, stimulating plant growth and morphogenesis, increasing the level of photosynthetic pigments and specific leaf weight. It possesses the nifH gene of nitrogen fixation, is capable of phosphate solubilization, synthesis of auxins and siderophores, and is antagonistic to plant pathogenic fungi and bacilli.  相似文献   

9.

Aims

Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition can provide legumes with a cheap source of nitrogen relative to symbiotic nitrogen fixation, leading to the potential breakdown of this critical symbiosis. Here, the effects of nitrogen deposition were tested on a native symbiosis between legumes and rhizobia.

Methods

Deposition rates, soil nitrogen concentration, and plant nitrogen isotopic composition were quantified along a predicted deposition gradient in California. Acmispon strigosus seedlings were exposed to fertilization spanning nitrogen concentrations observed in the plant’s California range. Both wild and experimental plants from pristine and nitrogen polluted sites were tested using rhizobial strains that varied in nitrogen fixation.

Results

Deposition intensity was tightly correlated with nitrogen concentration in soils. The growth benefits of rhizobial nodulation were dramatically reduced by even modest levels of mineral nitrogen, and all Acmispon lines failed to form root nodules at high nitrogen concentrations.

Conclusions

Our dataset suggests that anthropogenic deposition has greatly increased soil nitrogen concentrations in Southern California leading to significantly reduced benefits of rhizobial symbiosis. If nitrogen deposition increases continue, plant host mortality and a total collapse of the symbiosis could result.
  相似文献   

10.
Application of environmentally friendly agents to reduce the use of chemicals and to enhance growth of plants is an ultimate goal of sustainable agriculture. The use of plant growth-promoting endophytes has become of great interest as a way to enhance plant growth and additionally protect plants from phytopathogens. In this study, 135 isolates of endophytic bacteria including actinomycetes were isolated from roots of commercial sugarcane plants cultivated in Thailand and were characterized for plant growth-promoting (PGP) traits. Based on morphological and 16S rRNA sequence analysis, the endophytes were distributed into 14 genera of which the most dominant species belong to Bacillus, Enterobacter, Microbispora, and Streptomyces. Two strains of endophytic diazotrophs, Bacillus sp. EN-24 and Enterobacter sp. EN-21; and two strains of actinomycetes, Microbispora sp. GKU 823 and Streptomyces sp. GKU 895, were selected based on their PGP traits including 1-aminocyclopropane-1-decarboxylate deaminase, indole-3-acetic acid, nitrogen fixation, phosphate solubilization, and siderophore production for evaluation of sugarcane growth enhancement by individual and co-inoculation. Sixty days after co-inoculation by endophytic diazotrophs and actinomycetes, the growth parameters of sugarcane plants were significantly greater than that of individual and un-inoculated plants. The results indicated that these endophytes have high potential as PGP agents that could be applied to promote sugarcane growth and could be developed as active added value biofertilizers in the future.  相似文献   

11.

Aims

Plants interact by modifying soil conditions in plant-soil feedback processes. Foliar endophytes of grasses exert multiple effects on host rhizosphere with potential consequences on plant-soil feedback. Here, we hypothesize that the grass-endophyte symbiosis impairs soil symbiotic potential, and in turn influences legume performance and nitrogen acquisition.

Methods

Soil was conditioned in pots, growing Lolium multiflorum with or without the fungal endophyte Epichloë and with or without arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). Then, Trifolium repens grew in all types of conditioned soils with high or low rhizobia availability.

Results

Endophyte soil conditioning reduced AMF spores number and rhizobial nodules (?27 % and ?38 %, respectively). Seedling survival was lower in endophyte-conditioned soil and higher in mycorrhizal soils (?27 % and +24 %, respectively). High rhizobia-availability allowed greater growth and nitrogen acquisition, independent of soil conditioning. Low rhizobia-availability allowed both effects only in endophyte-conditioned soil.

Conclusion

Endophyte-induced changes in soil (i) hindered symbiotic potential by reducing AMF spore availability or rhizobia nodulation, (ii) impaired legume survival irrespective of belowground symbionts presence, but (iii) mimicked rhizobia effects, enhancing growth and nitrogen fixation in poorly nodulated plants. Our results show that shoot and root symbionts can be interactively involved in interspecific plant-soil feedback.
  相似文献   

12.
Application of plant growth regulators (PGRs) to soybean plants is known to induce changes in nitrogenase activity in root nodules, and this led us to hypothesize that PGRs would affect nitrogenase activity in free-living rhizobia cultures. Little is known about the molecular basis of the effects of PGRs on nitrogenase activity in free-living rhizobia cultures. Therefore, a comparative study was conducted on the effects of gibberellins (GA3) and mepiquat chloride (PIX), which regulate plant growth, on the nitrogenase activity of the nitrogen-fixing bacterium Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Fix and nif gene regulation and protein expression in free-living cultures of B. japonicum were investigated using real-time PCR and two-dimensional electrophoresis after treatment with GA3 or PIX. GA3 treatment decreased nitrogenase activity and the relative expression of nifA, nifH, and fixA genes, but these effects were reversed by PIX treatment. As expected, several proteins involved in nitrogenase synthesis were down-regulated in the GA3-treated group. Conversely, several proteins involved in nitrogenase synthesis were up-regulated in the PIX-treated group, including bifunctional ornithine acetyltransferase/N-acetylglutamate synthase, transaldolase, ubiquinol-cytochrome C reductase iron-sulfur subunit, electron transfer flavoprotein subunit beta, and acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. Two-pot experiments were conducted to evaluate the effects of GA3 and PIX on nodulation and nitrogenase activity in Rhizobium-treated legumes. Interestingly, GA3 treatment increased nodulation and depressed nitrogenase activity, but PIX treatment decreased nodulation and enhanced nitrogenase activity. Our data show that the nif and fix genes, as well as several proteins involved in nitrogenase synthesis, are up-regulated by PIX and down-regulated by GA3, respectively, in B. japonicum.  相似文献   

13.
The structure of the plasmid locus containing the sym-genes (nod-, nif-, and fix-operons) was investigated in eight Rhizobium leguminosarum strains differing in their origin and host specificity, including five strains of the viciae biovar—symbionts of pea (3), forage beans (1), and Vavilovia (1)—as well as three strains of the biovar trifolii (clover symbionts). Strains of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae, which possess the nodX gene (controlling acetylation of the Nod factor, which is responsible for the ability of rhizobia to form symbioses with a broad spectrum of hosts, including the “Afghan” pea lines, homozygous by the allele sym2A), are characterized by a less compact location of the sym-genes than the strains lacking the nodX gene. The size of the symbiotic cluster in the strains possessing nodX was 94.5 ± 3.5 kb, with the share of the sym-genes of 36.5 ± 1.5%, while for the strains lacking nodX these values were 61.7 ± 3.7 kb and 56.3 ± 1.4%, respectively (significant difference at P 0 < 0.01). Syntenic structures were revealed in the symbiotic regions of strains Vaf12, UPM1131, and TOM, as well as syntenic structures of non-symbiotic regions in strains Vaf12, TOM, and WSM1689. The correlation coefficients between the matrices of genetic distances in the analyzed strains for the nodABC, nifHDK, and fixABC operons were on average 0.993 ± 0.002, while their values for the plasmid sites located between the sym-genes were considerably less (0.706 ± 0.010). In these regions, 21 to 27% of the genes were involved in amino acid transport and metabolism, which was substantially higher than the average for the genome of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae (11–12%). These data suggest that the evolution of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae, defined by narrowing of the host specificity (associated with a loss of the nodX gene), was accompanied by reduction of the regions of plasmids located between the sym-genes, as well as by specialization of these areas to perform the functions related to symbiotic nitrogen fixation. The observed increase of density in the cluster of sym-genes may be associated with intensification of their horizontal transfer in the populations of rhizobia, which determines the speed of evolution of the symbiotic system.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The Rhizobia are collectively comprised of gram negative soil bacteria that have the ability to form symbiotic nitrogen-fixing root and/or stem nodules in association with leguminous plants. The taxonomy of these bacteria is continually in a state of flux, in large part due to rapid development of refined molecular biology techniques. The isolation and characterization of new, and often different, legumes-nodulating bacteria on a variety of plant hosts has resulted in the naming of many new rhizobial species. Here we update the taxonomy of the legume-nodulating bacteria and describe newly identified rhizobia capable of nodulating edible legumes and legume trees. In 1990, there was only one bacterial species that was known to nodulate common bean worldwide (Rhizobium leguminosarum sv. phaseoli), one species that nodulated faba bean (Rhizobium leguminosarum sv. viciae), and two species that nodulated soybean (Bradyrhizobium japonicum and Rhizobium fredii). Today, nearly 14, 11, 6, 5, 5, 4, 3 and 2 species have been defined that are capable of nodulating common bean, soybean, cowpea, chickpea, peanut, lentils, faba bean and pea, respectively. The recent use of whole genome based taxonomy (genomotaxonomy) will surely change how we define this important group of bacteria. The identification of several rhizobial species that are able to nodulate and fix nitrogen with edible legumes may enhance the production of these crops and can compensate for worldwide deficiencies in human nutritional needs in the future.  相似文献   

16.
Azotobacter species, free-living nitrogen-fixing bacteria, have been used as biofertilizers to improve the productivity of non-leguminous crops, including rice, due to their various plant growth-promoting traits. The purposes of this study were to characterize Azotobacter species isolated from rice rhizospheres in Taiwan and to determine the relationship between the species diversity of Azotobacter and soil properties. A total of 98 Azotobacter isolates were isolated from 27 paddy fields, and 16S rRNA gene sequences were used to identify Azotobacter species. The characteristics of these Azotobacter strains were analyzed including carbon source utilization and plant growth-promoting traits such as nitrogen fixation activity, indole acetic acid production, phosphate-solubilizing ability, and siderophore secretion. Of the 98 strains isolated in this study, 12 were selected to evaluate their effects on rice growth. Four species of Azotobacter were identified within these 98 strains, including A. beijerinckii, A. chroococcum, A. tropicalis, and A. vinelandii. Of these four species, A. chroococcum was predominant (51.0%) but A. beijerinckii had the highest level of nucleotide diversity. Strains within individual Azotobacter species showed diverse profiles in carbon source utilization. In addition, the species diversity of Azotobacter was significantly related to soil pH, Mn, and Zn. Members of the same Azotobacter species showed diverse plant growth-promoting traits, suggesting that the 98 strains isolated in this study may not equally effective in promoting rice growth. Of the 12 strains evaluated, A. beijerinckii CHB 461, A. chroococcum CHB 846, and A. chroococcum CHB 869 may be used to develop biofertilizers for rice cultivation because they significantly promoted rice growth. This study contributes to the selection of suitable Azotobacter strains for developing biofertilizer formulations and soil management strategies of Azotobacter for paddy fields.  相似文献   

17.
Legumes in the genus Adesmia are wild species with forage and medicinal potential. Their nitrogen fixation efficiency depends on their association with soil bacteria known as rhizobia. The aim of this work was to assess the diversity and symbiotic effectiveness of root nodule bacteria from Adesmia boronioides, Adesmia emarginata and Adesmia tenella from different regions of Chile. Adesmia spp. nodules were collected from seven sites obtaining 47 isolates, which resulted in 19 distinct strains. The diversity of the strains was determined via partial sequencing of the dnaK, 16srRNA and nodA genes. The strains were authenticated as root nodule bacteria on their original host and assessed for symbiotic effectiveness on A. emarginata and A. tenella. The strains from Adesmia tenella clustered within the Mesorhizobium clade. Adesmia boronioides nodulated with Mesorhizobium sp., Rhizobium leguminosarum and Bradyrhizobium sp. The rhizobia from A. emarginata were identified as Burkholderia spp, which was symbiotically ineffective on this species and on A. tenella. Strains isolated from Adesmia emarginata nodules, but unable to induce nodulation, were identified as Labrys methylaminiphilus. Labrys strain AG-49 significantly increased root dry weight in A. emarginata. The nodA genes from Adesmia strains were unique and correlated to legume host. A. emarginata was effectively nodulated by Bradyrhizobium AG-64 and A. tenella by Mesorhizobium strains AG-51 and AG.52. It is concluded that Adesmia emarginata, A. tenella and A. boronioides are associated to diverse bacterial symbionts and selection of an effective inoculant is a key step to assist Adesmia spp. adaptation and restoration.  相似文献   

18.
The role of different forms of natural selection in the evolution of genomes in root nodule bacteria (rhizobia) is analyzed for the first time. In these nitrogen-fixing symbionts of leguminous plants, two types of genome organization are revealed: (i) unitary type, where over 95% of genetic information is encoded by chromosomes (5.3–5.5 Mb in Azorhizobium, 7.0–7.8 Mb in Mesorhizobium, 7.3–10.1 Mb in Bradyrhizobium); (ii) multipartite type, where up to 50% of genetic information is allocated to plasmids or chromids which may exceed 2 Mb in size and usually control the symbiotic properties (pSyms) in fast-growing rhizobia (Rhizobium, Sinorhizobium, Neorhizobium). Emergence of fast-growing species with narrow host ranges are correlated to the extension of extrachromosomal parts of genomes, including the increase in pSyms sizes (in Sinorhizobium). An important role in this evolution is implemented by diversifying selection since the genomic diversity evolved in rhizobia owing to symbiotic interactions with highly divergent legumes. However, analysis of polymorphism in nod genes (encoding synthesis of lipo-chitooligosaccharide signaling Nod factors) suggests that the impacts of diversifying selection are restricted to the bacterial divergence for host specificity and do not influence the overall genome organization. Since the extension of rhizobia genome diversity results from the horizontal sym gene transfer occurring with low frequencies, we suggest that this extension is due to the frequency-dependent selection anchoring the rare genotypes in bacterial populations. It is implemented during the rhizobia competition for nodulation encoded by the functionally diverse cmp genes. Their location in different parts of bacterial genomes may be considered as an important factor of their adaptive diversification implemented in the host-associated microbial communities.  相似文献   

19.
A sustainable alternative to improve yield and the nutritive value of forage is the use of plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) that release nutrients, synthesize plant hormones and protect against phytopathogens (among other mechanisms). Azospirillum genus is considered an important PGPB, due to the beneficial effects observed when inoculated in several plants. The aim of this study was to evaluate the diversity of new Azospirillum isolates and select bacteria according to the plant growth promotion ability in three forage species from the Brazilian Pantanal floodplain: Axonopus purpusii, Hymenachne amplexicaulis and Mesosetum chaseae. The identification of bacterial isolates was performed using specific primers for Azospirillum in PCR reactions and partial sequencing of the 16S rRNA and nifH genes. The isolates were evaluated in vitro considering biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) and indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) production. Based on the results of BNF and IAA, selected isolates and two reference strains were tested by inoculation. At 31 days after planting the plant height, shoot dry matter, shoot protein content and root volume were evaluated. All isolates were able to fix nitrogen and produce IAA, with values ranging from 25.86 to 51.26 mg N mL?1 and 107–1038 µmol L?1, respectively. The inoculation of H. amplexicaulis and A. purpusii increased root volume and shoot dry matter. There were positive effects of Azospirillum inoculation on Mesosetum chaseae regarding plant height, shoot dry matter and root volume. Isolates MAY1, MAY3 and MAY12 were considered promising for subsequent inoculation studies in field conditions.  相似文献   

20.
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