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1.
The effect of rice culture on changes in the number of a strain of soybean root-nodule bacteria, (Bradyrhizobium japonicum CB1809), already established in the soil by growing inoculated soybean crops, was investigated in transitional red-brown earth soils at two sites in south-western New South Wales. At the first site, 5.5 years elapsed between the harvest of the last of four successive crops of soybean and the sowing of the next. In this period three crops of rice and one crop of triticale were sown and in the intervals between these crops, and after the crop of triticale, the land was fallowed. Before sowing the first rice crop, the number of Bradyrhizobium japonicum was 1.32×105 g–1 soil. The respective numbers of bradyrhizobia after the first, second and third rice crops were 4.52 ×104, 1.26×104 and 6.40×102 g–1 soil. In the following two years the population remained constant. Thus sufficient bradyrhizobia survived in soil to nodulate and allow N2-fixation by the succeeding soybean crop. At the second site, numbers of bradyrhizobia declined during a rice crop, but the decline was less than when the soil was fallowed (400-fold cf. 2200-fold). Multiplication of bradyrhizobia was rapid in the rhizosphere of soybean seedlings sown without inoculation in the rice bays. At 16 days after sowing, their numbers were not significantly different (p<0.05) from those in plots where rice had not been sown. Nodulation of soybeans was greatest in plots where rice had not been grown, but yield and grain nitrogen were not significantly different (p<0.05). Our results indicate that flooding soil has a deleterious effect on the survival of bradyrhizobia but, under the conditions of the experiments, sufficient B. japonicum strain CB 1809 survived to provide good nodulation after three crops of rice covering a total period of 5.5 years between crops of soybean.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Azospirillum was associated with nodules of soybean. In general, seed inoculation with a broth culture ofAzospirillum brasilense alone significantly increased nodulation and grain yield of soybean grown in pots in unsterilized soil with different levels of urea ranging from 0 to 80 kg N/ha. This trend was significantly reproducible in a second experiment when a carrier based inoculant of the bacterium was used for seed inoculation.Inoculation withRhizobium japonicum andA. brasilense in combination generally increased grain yield in both the experiments, although the data were not significant.  相似文献   

3.
Competition between inoculum strains ofRhizobium japonicum D 216 and 311 B applied to soybean seeds in mixed inocula depended, especially in the year of inoculation, directly on the ratio of the cell numbers of the two inoculum strains in mixtures. Uninoculated plants grown in original soil contaminated in August 1969 by inoculated seed and stored subsequently in original pots without watering for 8 months displayed, after the spring (May) and summer (August) sowing in 1970, a statistically significant nodulation shift in favour of the D 216 strain. The highest nodulatiou was achieved with all inoculation treatments during spring sowing in 1970.  相似文献   

4.
A factorial design 23 × 4 with two levels of Mussorie rockphosphate (RP) with or without vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungi and Bradyrhizobium japonicum, and four treatments of phosphate-solubilizing microbes (PSM) Pseudomonas striata, Bacillus polymyxa, Aspergillus awamori was employed using Patharchatta sandy loam soil (Typic Hapludoll). The observations included mycorrhization, nodulation, grain and straw yield, N and P uptake, available soil P and the PSM population in the soil after crop harvest. Inoculation with endophytes alone caused about 70% root colonization. Addition of rockphosphate or inoculation with PSM, except B. polymyxa, stimulated root infection of native as well as introduced VAM endophytes. Application of RP or inoculation with Bradyrhizobium japonicum, mycorrhizal fungi or phosphate-solubilizing microorganisms significantly increased nodulation, N uptake, available soil P and the PSM population in the soil after the crop harvest. The grain and straw yields did not increase following RP addition or mycorrhizal inoculation but increased significantly after inoculation wit Bradyrhizobium or PSM. In general, the application of RP, Bradyrhizobium, VAM and PSM in combinations of any two or three resulted in significant increases in nodulation, plant growth, grain yield and uptake of N and P. Among the four factor interactions, rockphosphate, Bradyrhizobium and P. striata in the absence of VAM resulted in maximal nodulation, grain and straw yields and N uptake by soybean. The highest P uptake by soybean grain was recorded with Bradyrhizobium and A. awamori in the absence of rockphosphate and VAM. Generally, available soil P and PSM population after crop harvest were not significantly increased by the treatment combinations giving the maximal uptake of nutrients. However, they increased significantly in response to PSM, which produced no significant increase in total uptake of nutrients.Research paper no. 7498  相似文献   

5.
Co-inoculation with antibiotic-producing bacteria and rhizobia resistant to those antibiotics has been proposed as a means of promoting colonization and nodulation of legumes by root-nodule bacteria. A study was conducted to establish some of the factors affecting co-inoculation with antibiotic-producing strains of Bacillus and Streptomyces griseus. The stimulation of Rhizobium meliloti and yield and N uptake by alfalfa was enhanced with increasing inoculum size of Bacillus sp. S. griseus and chitin added to soil increased nodulation of soybeans by Bradyrhizobium japonicum and increased nodulation, yield, and number of pods on a second crop grown in the same soil. Bacillus sp. persisted in soil in sufficient numbers for at least 51 days to increase colonization of soybean roots by B. japonicum. The populations of S. griseus, Bacillus sp., and antibiotic-resistant isolates of R. meliloti and B. japonicum fell after their addition to seeds. Nevertheless, a benefical effect by the antibiotic-producing bacteria was evident on R. meliloti colonization of the rhizosphere, nodulation, and yield of alfalfa grown from seeds stored 94 days and on B. japonicum colonization, nodule number, yield, and seed weight of soybeans grown from seeds stored 90 days. Because non-antibiotic-producing derivatives of Bacillus sp. and S. griseus did not promote colonization or nodulation of alfalfa roots by R. meliloti, the benefit of this co-inoculation is a result of antibiotic formation.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of soybean nodulation on the establishment ofRhizobium japonicum inRhizobium-free soil was examined. Seeds of nodulating (Rj 1) and nonnodulating (rj 1) isolines of soybeans and four other crop species (cowpeas, mungbeans, corn, and alfalfa) were grown in field plots that were inoculated with a genetically marked strain ofRhizobium (strain I-110 ARS) and the following year nodulating soybeans were grown in these plots and were inoculated with a different genetically marked subline of the same strain (strain I-110 FN). The proportion of nodules containing strain I-110 ARS relative to strain I-110 FN was determined and interpreted as reflecting the relative numbers of the two genetically marked sublines in the soil. The results clearly demonstrate that nodulation with the specific host plant (soybeans) has a significant positive role in the establishment ofRhizobium inRhizobium-free soil and suggests that alfalfa plants diminish the establishment of soybean rhizobia in soil.  相似文献   

7.
In this work the effect of inoculation with Bradyrhizobium japonicum S2492 on soybean (Glycine max (L) Merr) growth, nodulation and yield in nitrogen-deficient soil of Uzbekistan was studied. The field experiments were carried out in Tashkent Province of Uzbekistan in a randomized complete block design with four replicates of each treatment. The results revealed positive effects on growth, nodule number and yields of soybean after inoculation with B. japonicum S2492. The yield of soybean varieties was 48% higher for inoculated than for uninoculated plants. The effect of the inoculation was specific for variety but not for growth type. The protein and oil contents of seeds also increased after inoculation. It was concluded that B. japonicum S2492 can be considered as a biofertilizer for increasing the productivity of soybean in nitrogen-deficient soils in Uzbekistan.  相似文献   

8.
Experiments were undertaken to determine the effect ofPseudomonas fluorescens on nodulation of soybean by two strains ofBradyrhizobium japonicum, USDA I-110 and 61A76.Pseudomonas fluorescens can enhance the nodulation ability ofB. japonicum. Preincubation ofB. japonicum withP. fluorescens before inoculation further increased the level of nodulation.  相似文献   

9.
Rhizosphere response was studied as a factor in competition among indigenous Rhizobium japonicum serogroups for the nodulation of soybeans under field conditions. R. japonicum serogroups 110, 123, and 138 were found to coexist in a Waukegan field soil where they were determined to be the major nodulating rhizobia in soybean nodules. Competitive relationships among the three serogroups in that soil and in rhizospheres were examined during two growing seasons with several host cultivars with and without inoculation and with a nonlegume. Enumeration of each of the three competitors was carried out on inner rhizosphere and nonrhizosphere soil by immunofluorescence with serogroup-specific fluorescent antibodies. Rhizobia present in early- and late-season nodules were identified by fluorescent antibody analysis. Populations of each serogroup increased gradually in host rhizospheres, not exceeding 106/g of rhizosphere soil during the first few weeks after planting, whereas numbers in fallow soil remained at initial levels (104 to 105/g). The rhizosphere effects were minor in host plants during this period of nodule initiation and were about the same for all three serogroups. Although serogroup 123 gave no evidence of dominance in early host rhizospheres, it clearly dominated in nodule composition, occupying 60 to 100% of the nodules. High densities of all three serogroups were observed in host rhizospheres during flowering. Rhizosphere populations, especially of serogroup 123, were still high during pod fill and seed maturation. The rhizosphere responses of the R. japonicum serogroups were much greater with the soybean cultivars than with oats, but even in host rhizospheres the R. japonicum populations were greatly outnumbered by other bacteria. The success of serogroup 123 in achieving nodulation does not appear to be due to superior colonization of the host rhizosphere.  相似文献   

10.
The utilization of gels, which are used for fluid drilling of seeds, as carriers of Bradyrhizobium japonicum for soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) inoculation was studied. Gels of various chemical composition (magnesium silicate, potassium acrylate-acrylamide, grafted starch, and hydroxyethyl cellulose) were used, although the hydroxyethyl cellulose gels were more extensively investigated. Gel inocula were prepared by mixing gel powder with liquid cultures of B. japonicum (2% [wt/vol]). The population of B. japonicum USDA 110 did not change in each gel type during 8 days of incubation at 28°C. These fluid gels were prepared with late-exponential-growth-phase cells that were washed and suspended in physiological saline. Mid-exponential-growth-phase B. japonicum USDA 110, 123, and 138 grew in cellulose gels prepared with yeast extract-mannitol broth as well as or better than in yeast extract-mannitol broth alone for the first 10 days at 28°C. Populations in these cellulose gels after 35 days were as large as when the gels had originally been prepared, and survival occurred for at least 70 days. Soybeans grown in sand in the greenhouse had greater nodule numbers, nodule weights, and top weights with gel inoculants compared with a peat inoculant. In soil containing 103 indigenous B. japonicum per g of soil, inoculation resulted in increased soybean nodule numbers, nodule weights, and top weights, but only nodule numbers were greater with gel than with peat inoculation. The gel-treated seeds carried 102 to 103 more bacteria per seed (107 to 108) than did the peat-treated seeds.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of inoculating soybean plants withBradyrhizobium japonicum andAzospirillum brasilense either solely or in mixture, and of using different N fertilizer levels was studied in pot experiments. The nodulation of soybean grown in a sandy soil was enhanced by the inoculation while the highest nodule numbers and fresh mass, recorded at a N-fertilizer dose of 20 kg N/hm2, decreased when the fertilizer quantity increased to 40 kg N/hm2. By contrast, the dry mass of above-ground parts and the N uptake was increased with increasing N fertilizer level. A similar effect was observed for inoculation as compared with the uninoculated variant. Although the nodulating and non-nodulating soybeans has nearly the same dry mass, the nodulating isoline accumulated more N than the non-nodulating. The percentage of nitrogen derived from air (%, Ndfa) and estimated by isotope dilution (ID) or N difference method (DM) dropped with increasing N level from 10 to 40 kg N/hm2. Dual inoculation resulted in a high per cent of fixed N2 (42.5%) at 10 kg N/hm2. Correlation between the ID and DM methods was found to be dependent on inoculation treatments. The amount of nitrogen utilized by nodulating soybean (FUE %) was enhanced as a function of inoculation withB. japonicum.  相似文献   

12.
In areas with short growing seasons, poor early vegetative growth of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) is often attributed to the restrictive effect of cool soil conditions on nodulation and N2-fixation by this subtropical grain legume. However, there are few studies regarding potential genetic variability of soybean and Bradyrhizobium japonicum genotypes for nodulation at cool root-zone temperatures (RZT). Experiments were conducted to (1) test for a threshold temperature for low RZT inhibition of soybean nodulation and (2) ascertain whether this threshold temperature response depends mainly on the micro- or macrosymbiont. In experiment 1 soybean seedlings (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv. Maple Arrow) were inoculated with 1 ml of a log phase culture of B. japonicum strain 532C, H8 or H15 (the latter two strains were isolated from cold soils of Hokkaido, northern Japan) and maintained at either 16, 17.5, 19 or 25°C RZT. In experiment 2 seedlings of cv. Maple Arrow and a cold-tolerant Evans isoline were combined with strain 532C and two Hokkaido strains (H5, H30) at both 19 and 25°C RZT. Results indicated that N2-fixation at 44 days after inoculation was substantially reduced (30–40%) by RZT as high as 19°C, due to development of less nodule mass and to a delay in the onset of N2-fixation and a small decrease in the number of nodules formed. However, the number of nodules formed was sharply reduced and the time required for the first appearance of nodules was significantly delayed below an RZT of 17.5°C. Differences between cultivars for nodulation and N accumulation were apparent at 25°C, but were abolished by growth at 19°C, indicating that, in spite of differences in growth potential between the cultivars under optimum RZT, both cultivars were equally limited by low RZT. Differences between B. japonicum strains were consistent across temperatures and were largely attributable to higher rates of specific nodule activity recorded for strain 532C, which seemed well adapted to low RZT. These results suggest that the host plant mediates the sensitivity of N2-fixation under low RZT and that inoculation with B. japonicum strains from cold environments is unlikely to enhance soybean N2-fixation under cool soil conditions.  相似文献   

13.
In short-season soybean production areas, low soil temperature is the major factor limiting plant growth and yield. The decreases in soybean yield at low temperatures are mainly due to nitrogen limitation. Genistein, the most effective plant-to-bacterium signal in the soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) nitrogen fixation symbiosis, was used to pretreat Bradyrhizobium japonicum. We have previously reported that this increased soybean nodulation and nitrogen fixation in growth chamber studies. Two field experiments were conducted on two adjacent sites in 1994 to determine whether the incubation of B. japonicum with genistein, prior to application as an inoculant, or genistein, without B. japonicum, applied onto seeds in the furrow at the time of planting, increased soybean grain yield and protein yield in short season areas. The results of these experiments indicated that genistein-preincubated bradyrhizobia increased the grain yield and protein yield of AC Bravor, the later maturing of the two cultivars tested. Genistein without B. japonicum, applied onto seeds in the furrow at the time of planting also increased both grain and protein yield by stimulation of native soil B. japonicum. Interactions existed between genistein application and soybean cultivars, and indicated that the cultivar with the greatest yield potential responded more to genistein addition.  相似文献   

14.
Two strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum, recognizable by their intrinsic resistance to high levels of antibiotics and their serological features were introduced into three calcareous soils under field conditions. These strains were re-isolated 16 or 20 years later and compared with the parental strains kept lyophilized. In the Dijon location, the survival was high although soybean was never grown in the field. But the B. japonicum completely disappeared in the Montpellier field after 10 years under vineyard. In the Toulouse field after the two initially introduced strains, inoculation of subsequent soybean crops with a new strain enabled this strain to occupy 70–80% of the nodules; these results suggest that under such conditions the problem of competition can be solved by repeated inoculation. In this field, the number of introduced B. japonicum remained high during 4 years without soybeans, but a new inoculation would be necessary after 5 years. In the two fields where the survival was high, the two strains remained at about the same relative level as at introduction, there was no detectable exchange of characters between them. With regards to agronomic characteristics, there were no important changes in the competitivity of the strains. Among the eight field isolates tested in a greenhouse for efficiency by comparison with eight lyophilized isolates, seven showed no significant difference for the total weight of soybean or seed yield but one field isolate showed a loss of efficiency corresponding to 27% less seed weight. This long-term experiment allowed us to conclude that the B. japonicumstrains used were stable for many characters, but variations in efficiency may rarely occur.  相似文献   

15.
High CO2 has been shown to increase plant growth and to affect symbiotic activity in many legumes species, including soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.). In order to assess the interaction between elevated CO2 and rhizobial symbionts on soybean growth and nodulation, we combined the effects of CO2 with those of different bradyrhizobial strains and methods of inoculation. Soybean seeds were sown in agricultural soil in pots and inoculated with three strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum (5Sc2 and 12NS14 indigenous to Quebec soils, and 532c, a reference strain), the inoculum being either applied directly to the seed or incorporated into the soil. Plants were grown in growth chambers (22/17ºC) for 6 weeks, under either near ambient (400 μmol mol?1) or elevated (800 μmol mol?1) concentrations of CO2. Elevated CO2 increased mass (63%) and number (50%) of soybean nodules, particularly medium and large, allowed a deeper nodule development, and increased shoot dry weight (+30%), shoot C uptake (+33%) and shoot N uptake (+78%), compared to ambient CO2. The two indigenous strains induced more medium and large nodules under elevated CO2 than the reference strain and showed the greatest increases in shoot dry weight. Soil inoculation induced higher number of small nodules than seed inoculation, specifically for the two indigenous strains, but did not affect plant growth parameters. We conclude that soybean yield enhancements due to elevated CO2 are associated with the production of large and medium-size nodules and a deep nodulation, that the two indigenous strains better respond to elevated CO2 than the reference strain, and that the method of inoculation has little influence on this response.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of inoculating soil with a water suspension of Bradyrhizobium japonicum (i) at seeding, (ii) 7, or (iii) 14 days after planting (DAP), (iv) seed slurry inoculation and (v) seed slurry supplemented with postemergence inoculation of a water suspension of Bradyrhizobium at 7 or (vi) 14 DAP, on nodulation, N2 fixation and yield of soybean (Glycine max. [L.] Merrill) were compared in the greenhouse. The 15N isotope dilution technique was used to quantify N2 fixed at flowering, early pod filling and physiological maturity stages (36, 52 and 70 DAP, respectively). On average, the water suspension inoculation formed the greatest number of nodules, and seed plus postemergence inoculation formed slightly more nodules than the seed-only inoculated plants (27, 19 and 12 nodules/plant respectively at physiological maturity). Seed slurry inoculation followed by postemergence inoculation at 14 DAP gave the highest nodule weight, with the plants fixing significantly more (P<0.05) N2 (125 mg N plant−1 or 56% N) than any other treatment (mean, 75 mg plant−1 or 35% N). However, the higher N2 fixation was not translated into higher N or dry matter yields. Estimates of N2 fixed by the ostemergence Bradyrhizobium inoculations as well as plant yield were not significantly different from those of the seed slurry inoculation. Thus, delaying inoculation (e.g., by two weeks as in this study) did not reduce the symbiotic ability of soybean plants.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of acidic soil factors (Al, H-ion, Mo, and Mn) upon the soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Essex)/Bradyrhizobium japonicum symbiosis were examined in acidified soil. Plants were grown under full sunlight in pots containing N-deficient soil (pH 6.7) or similar soil amended with sufficient Al2(SO4)3 or elemental S to give soil pH values of 4.8 and 4.6, respectively, and water-extractable Al levels of 30 and 14 M, respectively. Other treatments consisted of the addition of inorganic N or inoculation with commercial or locally-isolated B. japonicum. Acidification did not reduce shoot or root weights of plants receiving inorganic N but reduced (P0.05) shoot and root dry weights, nodule dry weights and numbers, shoot N concentrations, and chlorophyll levels of inoculated plants. Shoot dry weights and nodulation of inoculated plants were greater (P0.05) in Al2(SO4)3-amended soil than in S-amended soil. Addition of Mo was not beneficial. It was concluded that reduced plant growth was caused by the effects of acidified soil on nodulation and that H-ion toxicity was probably the most limiting factor. Effects of Al, Mn, or Mo appeared less likely.  相似文献   

18.
In soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) the uninfected cells of the root nodule are responsible for the final steps in ureide production from recently fixed nitrogen. Stereological methods and an original quantitative method were used to investigate the organization of these cells and their spatial relationships to infected cells in the central region of nodules of soybean inoculated with Rhizobium japonicum strain USDA 3I1B110 and grown with and without nitrogen (as nitrate) in the nutrient medium. The volume occupied by the uninfected tissue was 21% of the total volume of the central infected region for nodules of plants grown without nitrate, and 31% for nodules of plants grown with nitrate. Despite their low relative volume, the uninfected cells outnumbered the much larger infected cells in nodules of plants grown both without and with nitrate. The surface density of the interface between the ininfected and infected tissue in the infected region was similar for nodules in both cases also, the total range being from 24 to 26 mm2/mm3. In nodules of plants grown without nitrate, all sampled infected cells were found to be in contact with at least one uninfected cell. The study demonstrates that although the uninfected tissue in soybean nodules occupies a relatively small volume, it is organized so as to produce a large surface area for interaction with the infected tissue.  相似文献   

19.
Pan  B.  Smith  D.L. 《Plant and Soil》2000,223(1-2):237-244
Genistein is the major root produced isoflavonoid inducer of nod genes in the symbiosis between B. japonicum and soybean plants. Reduction in the isoflavonoid content of the host plants has recently been suggested as a possible explanation for the inhibition of mineral nitrogen (N) on the establishment of the symbiosis. In order to determine whether genistein addition could overcome this inhibition, we incubated B. japonicum cells (strain 532C) with genistein. Mineral N (in the form of NH4NO3) was applied at 0, 20 and 100 kg ha-1. The experiments were conducted on both a sandy-loam soil and a clay-loam soil. Preincubation of B. japonicum cells with genistein increased soybean nodule number and nodule weight, especially in the low-N-containing sandy-loam soil and the low N fertilizer treatment. Plant growth and yield were less affected by genistein preincubation treatments than nitrogen assimilation. Total plant nitrogen content was increased by the two genistein preincubation treatments at the early flowering stage. At maturity, shoot and total plant nitrogen contents were increased by the 40 μM genistein preincubation treatment at the sandy-loam soil site. Total nitrogen contents were increased by the 20 μM genistein preincubation treatment only at the 0 and 20 kg ha-1 nitrate levels in clay-loam soil. Forty μM genistein preincubation treatment increased soybean yield on the sandy-loam soil. There was no difference among treatments for 100-seed weight. The results suggest that preincubation of B. japonicum cells with genistein could improve soybean nodulation and nitrogen fixation, and at least partially overcome the inhibition of mineral nitrogen on soybean nodulation and nitrogen fixation. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
The relationship between numbers of rhizobia and nodulation response of legumes is of considerable practical importance. Experiments were done under controlled conditions to determine the influence of numbers of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar. trifolii on nodulation of arrowleaf clover (Trifolium vesiculosum Savi.) and crimson clover (T. incarnatum L.). Numbers of rhizobia in excess of 1000 per seed did not substantially increase earliness of nodulation or total number of nodules formed on the taproot. Nodules, however, were formed nearer the top of the taproot as numbers of rhizobia increased to 100,000 per seed. Delayed inoculation experiments indicated that nodulation sites for these clovers only remained susceptible to infection for less than 1 day. Delaying inoculation for 4 days resulted in only a 1 to 2 day delay in nodulation for arrowleaf and crimson clovers respectively and no delay for subterranean clover (T. subterraneum L.). Apparently, larger seedlings nodulated faster.  相似文献   

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