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1.
Populations of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae were sampled from two bulk soils, rhizosphere, and nodules of host legumes, fava bean (Vicia faba) and pea (Pisum sativum) grown in the same soils. Additional populations nodulating peas, fava beans, and vetches (Vicia sativa) grown in other soils and fava bean-nodulating strains from various geographic sites were also analyzed. The rhizobia were characterized by repetitive extragenomic palindromic-PCR fingerprinting and/or PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of 16S-23S ribosomal DNA intergenic spacers as markers of the genomic background and PCR-RFLP of a nodulation gene region, nodD, as a marker of the symbiotic component of the genome. Pairwise comparisons showed differences among the genetic structures of the bulk soil, rhizosphere, and nodule populations and in the degree of host specificity within the Vicieae cross-inoculation group. With fava bean, the symbiotic genotype appeared to be the preponderant determinant of the success in nodule occupancy of rhizobial genotypes independently of the associated genomic background, the plant genotype, and the soil sampled. The interaction between one particular rhizobial symbiotic genotype and fava bean seems to be highly specific for nodulation and linked to the efficiency of nitrogen fixation. By contrast with bulk soil and fava bean-nodulating populations, the analysis of pea-nodulating populations showed preferential associations between genomic backgrounds and symbiotic genotypes. Both components of the rhizobial genome may influence competitiveness for nodulation of pea, and rhizosphere colonization may be a decisive step in competition for nodule occupancy.  相似文献   

2.
The symbiotic relationships between legumes and their nitrogen (N(2))-fixing bacterial partners (rhizobia) vary in effectiveness to promote plant growth according to both bacterial and legume genotype. To assess the selective effect of host plant on its microsymbionts, the influence of the pea (Pisum sativum) genotype on the relative nodulation success of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae (Rlv) genotypes from the soil populations during plant development has been investigated. Five pea lines were chosen for their genetic variability in root and nodule development. Genetic structure and diversity of Rlv populations sampled from nodules were estimated by molecular typing with a marker of the genomic background (rDNA intergenic spacer) and a nodulation gene marker (nodD region). Differences were found among Rlv populations related to pea genetic background but also to modification of plant development caused by single gene mutation. The growth stage of the host plant also influenced structuring of populations. A particular nodulation genotype formed the majority of nodules during the reproductive stage. Overall, modification in root and nodule development appears to strongly influence the capacity of particular rhizobial genotypes to form nodules.  相似文献   

3.
In order to investigate bean-nodulating rhizobia in different types of soil, 41 nodule isolates from acid and alkaline soils in Mexico were characterized. Based upon the phylogenetic studies of 16S rRNA, atpD, glnII, recA, rpoB, gyrB, nifH and nodC genes, the isolates originating from acid soils were identified as the phaseoli symbiovar of the Rhizobium leguminosarum-like group and Rhizobium grahamii, whereas the isolates from alkaline soils were defined as Ensifer americanum sv. mediterranense and Rhizobium radiobacter. The isolates of “R. leguminosarum” and E. americanum harbored nodC and nifH genes, but the symbiotic genes were not detected in the four isolates of the other two species. It was the first time that “R. leguminosarum” and E. americanum have been reported as bean-nodulating bacteria in Mexico. The high similarity of symbiotic genes in the Rhizobium and Ensifer populations showed that these genes had the same origin and have diversified recently in different rhizobial species. Phenotypic characterization revealed that the “R. leguminosarum” population was more adapted to the acid and low salinity conditions, while the E. americanum population preferred alkaline conditions. The findings of this study have improved the knowledge of the diversity, geographic distribution and evolution of bean-nodulating rhizobia in Mexico.  相似文献   

4.
Leguminous plants have the ability to make their own nitrogen fertilizer by forming a root nodule symbiosis with nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria, collectively called rhizobia. This biological process plays a critical role in sustainable agriculture because it reduces the need for external nitrogen input. One remarkable property of legume–rhizobial symbiosis is its high level of specificity, which occurs at both inter- and intra-species levels and takes place at multiple phases of the interaction, ranging from initial bacterial infection and nodulation to late nodule development associated with nitrogen fixation. Knowledge of the molecular mechanisms controlling symbiotic specificity will facilitate the development of new crop varieties with improved agronomic potential for nitrogen-fixing symbiosis. In this report, we describe fine mapping of the Rj4 locus, a gene controlling nodulation specificity in soybean (Glycine max). The Rj4 allele prevents the host plant from nodulation with many strains of Bradyrhizobium elkanii, which are frequently present in soils of the southeastern USA. Since B. elkanii strains are poor symbiotic partners of soybean, cultivars containing an Rj4 allele are considered favorable. We have delimited the Rj4 locus within a 57-kb genomic region on soybean chromosome 1. The data reported here will facilitate positional cloning of the Rj4 gene and the development of genetic markers for marker-assisted selection in soybean.  相似文献   

5.
Within the framework of our study, we assessed the nodule occupancy of a mixture of various strains of rhizobia to inoculate several provenances of Acacia senegal and Acacia nilotica. The first part of the experiment was carried out under greenhouse conditions where the plants were cultivated in polyvinyl chloride tubes containing an unsterilized Sangalkam soil low in organic matter and nitrogen. The results showed that 4 and 8 months after sowing, rhizobial strains CIRADF 306 and CIRADF 300 were mainly present in nodules of A. nilotica and A. senegal, respectively. After transferring the seedlings to the more fertile soil in Bel Air field station, the molecular analysis of the nodules showed that strain CIRADF 306 was absent from the nodules of A. nilotica, whereas strain CIRADF 305 which occurred only at low nodule occupancy in the nursery, predominated in the field conditions. On the other hand, strain CIRADF 300 occurred in the majority of the nodules from the various provenances of A. senegal. These results demonstrated actual interaction between inoculated rhizobial strains, soil type and host plant genotype in terms of competitiveness, nodulation and symbiotic nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

6.
Nodulation abilities of bacteria in the subclasses Gammaproteobacteria and Betaproteobacteria on black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) were tested. Pseudomonas sp., Burkholderia sp., Klebsiella sp., and Paenibacillus sp. were isolated from surface-sterilized black locust nodules, but their nodulation ability is unknown. The aims of this study were to determine if these bacteria are symbiotic. The species and genera of the strains were determined by RFLP analysis and DNA sequencing of 16S rRNA gene. Inoculation tests and histological studies revealed that Pseudomonas sp. and Burkholderia sp. formed nodules on black locust and also developed differentiated nodule tissue. Furthermore, a phylogenetic analysis of nodA and a BLASTN analysis of the nodC, nifH, and nifHD genes revealed that these symbiotic genes of Pseudomonas sp. and Burkholderia sp. have high similarities with those of rhizobial species, indicating that the strains acquired the symbiotic genes from rhizobial species in the soil. Therefore, in an actual rhizosphere, bacterial diversity of nodulating legumes may be broader than expected in the Alpha-, Beta-, and Gammaproteobacteria subclasses. The results indicate the importance of horizontal gene transfer for establishing symbiotic interactions in the rhizosphere.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
We isolated and characterized CE3003, a Tn5-induced mutant with altered colony morphology derived from Rhizobium etli CE3. CE3003 produced domed colonies and was highly hydrophobic as indicated by its ability to partition into hexadecane, whereas its parent produced flat colonies and was hydrophilic. On bean plants, CE3003 induced nodules and reduced acetylene. CE3003 and CE3 grew at similar rates when they were grown separately or together in culture medium or inoculated singly onto bean seeds. However, when they were mixed at a 1:1 ratio and applied to seeds, CE3003 achieved significantly lower populations than CE3 in the rhizosphere. Five days after coinoculation of CE3 and CE3003, the population of the mutant was less than 10% of the population of CE3 in the bean rhizosphere. To determine the nodulation competitiveness of the mutant, it was coinoculated with CE3 at various ratios at planting, and the ratio of the nodules occupied by each strain was determined 21 days later. A 17,000-fold excess of CE3003 in mixed inocula was required to obtain equal nodule occupancy by the two strains. A genomic library of strain CE3 was mobilized into CE3003, and we identified a cosmid, pRA3003, that restored the parental colony morphology and hydrophilicity to the mutant. Restoration of the parental colony morphology was accompanied by recovery of the ability to grow competitively in the rhizosphere and to compete for nodulation of beans. The data show an association between cell surface hydrophobicity, nodulation competitiveness, and competitive growth in the rhizosphere in mutant CE3003.  相似文献   

9.
Mutch LA  Young JP 《Molecular ecology》2004,13(8):2435-2444
The symbiotic partnerships between legumes and their root-nodule bacteria (rhizobia) vary widely in their degree of specificity, but the underlying reasons are not understood. To assess the potential for host-range evolution, we have investigated microheterogeneity among the shared symbionts of a group of related legume species. Host specificity and genetic diversity were characterized for a soil population of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae (Rlv) sampled using six wild Vicia and Lathyrus species and the crop plants pea (Pisum sativum) and broad bean (Vicia faba). Genetic variation among 625 isolates was assessed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of loci on the chromosome (ribosomal gene spacer) and symbiosis plasmid (nodD region). Broad bean strongly favoured a particular symbiotic genotype that formed a distinct phylogenetic subgroup of Rlv nodulation genotypes but was associated with a range of chromosomal backgrounds. Host range tests of 80 isolates demonstrated that only 34% of isolates were able to nodulate V. faba. By contrast, 89% were able to nodulate all the local wild hosts tested, so high genetic diversity of the rhizobial population cannot be ascribed directly to the diversity of host species at the site. Overall the picture is of a population of symbionts that is diversified by plasmid transfer and shared fairly indiscriminately by local wild legume hosts. The crop species are less promiscuous in their interaction with symbionts than the wild legumes.  相似文献   

10.
Mutualistic symbiosis and nitrogen fixation of legume rhizobia play a key role in ecological environments. Although many different rhizobial species can form nodules with a specific legume, there is often a dominant microsymbiont, which has the highest nodule occupancy rates, and they are often known as the “most favorable rhizobia”. Shifts in the most favorable rhizobia for a legume in different geographical regions or soil types are not well understood. Therefore, in order to explore the shift model, an experiment was designed using successive inoculations of rhizobia on one legume. The plants were grown in either sterile vermiculite or a sandy soil. Results showed that, depending on the environment, a legume could select its preferential rhizobial partner in order to establish symbiosis. For perennial legumes, nodulation is a continuous and sequential process. In this study, when the most favorable rhizobial strain was available to infect the plant first, it was dominant in the nodules, regardless of the existence of other rhizobial strains in the rhizosphere. Other rhizobial strains had an opportunity to establish symbiosis with the plant when the most favorable rhizobial strain was not present in the rhizosphere. Nodule occupancy rates of the most favorable rhizobial strain depended on the competitiveness of other rhizobial strains in the rhizosphere and the environmental adaptability of the favorable rhizobial strain (in this case, to mild vermiculite or hostile sandy soil). To produce high nodulation and efficient nitrogen fixation, the most favorable rhizobial strain should be selected and inoculated into the rhizosphere of legume plants under optimum environmental conditions.  相似文献   

11.

Background  

Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae (Rlv) is a soil bacterium which can form nitrogen-fixing symbiotic relationships with leguminous plants. Numerous rhizobial strains found in soils compete with each other. Competition can occur both during the saprophytic growth phase in the rhizosphere and inside plant tissues, during the symbiotic phase. Competition is important as it may affect the composition of rhizobial populations present in the soil and in the root nodules of plants.  相似文献   

12.
In a green-house experiment, five cultivars of Pisum sativum L. grown on soils from 10 different locations in Tunisia, showed significant differences in nodulation, shoot dry matter (shDM) yield and shoot nitrogen content (shNC). The effect of soil on biological nitrogen fixation, as evidenced by the number and weight of nodules, was mainly attributable to the available phosphorus content. Cate-Nelson ANOVA analysis established a critical value of soil test phosphorus (STP) of 20 mg P kg–1 soil for nodule weight and number for the majority of cultivars. Within cultivars, nodulation varied with maturation period and was correlated with shoot NC. Thus, the overall interaction of soil-P content and cultivar-maturation period were correlated positively with nodulation and to symbiotic effectiveness of strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viceae indigenous to these soils. Based on an antibiotic susceptibility test and main variable factor analysis of the data obtained, 70 isolates of Rhizobia that nodulate pea, obtained from soils from agricultural sites throughout Tunisia, were identified as belonging to 18 distinct strains. These classes were identified on the basis of symbiotic efficiency parameters (shoot DM yield and shoot NC) as: ineffective (33 isolates), moderately effective (27 isolates), and efficient strains (10 isolates). This study shows that the Mateur site, an agricultural area for millennia in the northern region of Tunisia, harbors rhizobial strains that are highly efficient in fixing N2 with peas. These results also indicate the importance of strain-cultivar interrelationships and specificity.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Egyptian soils are generally characterized by slightly alkaline to alkaline pH values (7.5–8.7) which are mainly due to its dry environment. In arid and semi-arid regions, salts are less concentrated and sodium dominates in carbonate and bicarbonate forms, which enhance the formation of alkaline soils. Alkaline soils have fertility problems due to poor physical properties which adversely affect the growth and the yield of crops. Therefore, this study was devoted to investigating the synergistic interaction of Rhizobium and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi for improving growth of faba bean grown in alkaline soil. A total of 20 rhizobial isolates and 4 species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) were isolated. The rhizobial isolates were investigated for their ability to grow under alkaline stress. Out of 20 isolates 3 isolates were selected as tolerant isolates. These 3 rhizobial isolates were identified on the bases of the sequences of the gene encoding 16S rRNA and designated as Rhizobium sp. Egypt 16 (HM622137), Rhizobium sp. Egypt 27 (HM622138) and Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae STDF-Egypt 19 (HM587713). The best alkaline tolerant was R. leguminosarum bv. viciae STDF-Egypt 19 (HM587713). The effect of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae STDF-Egypt 19 and mixture of AMF (Acaulospora laevis, Glomus geosporum, Glomus mosseae and Scutellospora armeniaca) both individually and in combination on nodulation, nitrogen fixation and growth of Vicia faba under alkalinity stress were assessed. A significant increase over control in number and mass of nodules, nitrogenase activity, leghaemoglobin content of nodule, mycorrhizal colonization, dry mass of root and shoot was recorded in dual inoculated plants than plants with individual inoculation. The enhancement of nitrogen fixation of faba bean could be attributed to AMF facilitating the mobilization of certain elements such as P, Fe, K and other minerals that involve in synthesis of nitrogenase and leghaemoglobin. Thus it is clear that the dual inoculation with Rhizobium and AMF biofertilizer is more effective for promoting growth of faba bean grown in alkaline soils than the individual treatment, reflecting the existence of synergistic relationships among the inoculants.  相似文献   

15.
Seventeen leguminous species common to the Pacific Northwest were evaluated as potential hosts of the pea cyst nematode, Heterodera goettingiana, in both greenhouse and field experiments. In all experiments, juveniles of H. goettingiana penetrated roots of these 17 species with the exception of greenhouse-grown chickpea. Nematodes molted and developed into swollen third-stage or fourth-stage juveniles in many of the plants, but cyst development occurred only in the field on green pea, edible dry pea, and faba bean. More H. goettingiana cysts developed on fava bean than on green pea or edible dry pea. In H. goettingiana-infested soils, cropping sequences that include fava bean and pea should be avoided. However, certain legumes, such as winter vetch, may have the potential of serving as trap crops for H. goettingiana in this region.  相似文献   

16.
应用BOX分子标记技术筛选南苜蓿高效根瘤菌菌株   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
【目的】应用BOX-PCR技术对12株南苜蓿(Medicago polymorpha)接种根瘤菌菌株在土壤中的竞争结瘤能力进行研究,以占瘤率的高低配合植物生长性状最终确定与南苜蓿共生的高效根瘤菌菌株。【方法】对接种根瘤菌产生的南苜蓿根瘤进行分离培养,选择部分结瘤菌株和12株全部供试接种菌株进行BOX分子指纹图谱研究,经过对图谱的比较与分析获得了各接种菌株的占瘤率。【结果】在供试菌株中,来自于云南盈江的菌株SWF67523占瘤率最高,为93.33%,说明菌株SWF67523具有较强的竞争结瘤能力,该菌株对南苜蓿干重增幅也较高,为100%;菌株SWF67409来自于云南楚雄,其占瘤率略低于菌株SWF67523,但其对提高植物干重的贡献最大(增幅106.5%);来自于云南楚雄的菌株SWF67394占瘤率较低,但其结瘤率高,对植物生长的影响作用也较明显。【结论】将根瘤菌菌株的竞争结瘤能力纳入南苜蓿高效根瘤菌菌株的筛选中,研究获得了一株竞争结瘤能力强、显著提高植物生物量的菌株SWF67523,以及促生根瘤菌菌株SWF67409和SWF67394,为生产高效根瘤菌菌剂提供了物质基础。  相似文献   

17.
Bacteria belonging to the genera Rhizobium, Mesorhizobium, Sinorhizobium, Bradyrhizobium, and Azorhizobium (collectively referred to as rhizobia) grow in the soil as free-living organisms but can also live as nitrogen-fixing symbionts inside root nodule cells of legume plants. The interactions between several rhizobial species and their host plants have become models for this type of nitrogen-fixing symbiosis. Temperate legumes such as alfalfa, pea, and vetch form indeterminate nodules that arise from root inner and middle cortical cells and grow out from the root via a persistent meristem. During the formation of functional indeterminate nodules, symbiotic bacteria must gain access to the interior of the host root. To get from the outside to the inside, rhizobia grow and divide in tubules called infection threads, which are composite structures derived from the two symbiotic partners. This review focuses on symbiotic infection and invasion during the formation of indeterminate nodules. It summarizes root hair growth, how root hair growth is influenced by rhizobial signaling molecules, infection of root hairs, infection thread extension down root hairs, infection thread growth into root tissue, and the plant and bacterial contributions necessary for infection thread formation and growth. The review also summarizes recent advances concerning the growth dynamics of rhizobial populations in infection threads.  相似文献   

18.
We describe the isolation and characterization of alfalfa-nodulating rhizobia from acid soils of different locations in Central Argentina and Uruguay. A collection of 465 isolates was assembled, and the rhizobia were characterized for acid tolerance. Growth tests revealed the existence of 15 acid-tolerant (AT) isolates which were able to grow at pH 5.0 and formed nodules in alfalfa with a low rate of nitrogen fixation. Analysis of those isolates, including partial sequencing of the genes encoding 16S rRNA and genomic PCR-fingerprinting with MBOREP1 and BOXC1 primers, demonstrated that the new isolates share a genetic background closely related to that of the previously reported Rhizobium sp. Or191 recovered from an acid soil in Oregon (B. D. Eardly, J. P. Young, and R. K. Selander, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 58:1809–1815, 1992). Growth curves, melanin production, temperature tolerance, and megaplasmid profiles of the AT isolates were all coincident with these characteristics in strain Or191. In addition to the ability of all of these strains to nodulate alfalfa (Medicago sativa) inefficiently, the AT isolates also nodulated the common bean and Leucaena leucocephala, showing an extended host range for nodulation of legumes. In alfalfa, the time course of nodule formation by the AT isolate LPU 83 showed a continued nodulation restricted to the emerging secondary roots, which was probably related to the low rate of nitrogen fixation by the largely ineffective nodules. Results demonstrate the complexity of the rhizobial populations present in the acidic soils represented by a main group of N2-fixing rhizobia and a second group of ineffective and less-predominant isolates related to the AT strain Or191.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphorus uptake by bean nodules   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
As part of a breeding program to improve the nitrogen-fixing symbiosis between common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) and Rhizobium etli, we developed a rapid screen for common bean accessions that preferentially nodulate with KIM5s, a high nitrogen fixing strain of R. etli. We constructed a mutant of KIM5s that did not fix nitrogen (Fix-) but was otherwise indistinguishable from KIM5s. We screened plants for symptoms of nitrogen deficiency when grown in a Honduran soil containing indigenous common bean-nodulating rhizobia (104 per gram) and KM6001, the Fix- mutant of KIM5s (104/seedling added 7 days after planting). Leaf color was scored on a scale of 1 to 5, in which 1 was dark green and 5 was bright yellow. Of 820 genetically diverse accessions of P. vulgaris screened, 51 were scored 1, 626 were scored 2 or 3, and 143 were scored 4 or 5. Selfed seed was produced from common bean plants of the accessions scored 1, 4 or 5. Twenty-four accessions that scored 1, and 58 that scored 4 or 5 were screened in soil containing indigenous rhizobia and the wild type KIM5s (Fix+), and nodule occupancy was determined by antibiotic resistance. On the 24 common bean accessions that were scored 1, KIM5s occupied 0-6% of the nodules, on 26 of the accessions that were scored 4 or 5, KIM5s occupied 90%-100% of the nodules, and on the remaining 34 that scored 4 or 5, there was a distribution of nodule occupancy. Foliar color was highly correlated with nodule occupancy (r = 0.786,p = 0.01). The results indicate that the rapid visual screen using the Fix- mutant accurately identified common bean accessions that preferentially nodulate with the wild-type KIM5s (Fix+) strain in soil containing indigenous rhizobia. This screen will facilitate introduction of the preferential nodulation trait into superior cultivars and provides the foundation for studies of the genetic basis of preferential nodulation.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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