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1.
Soil Bradyrhizobium populations limit nodule occupancy of soybean by symbiotically-superior inoculant strains throughout much of the American midwest. In this study, the competitiveness of indigenous populations of B. japonicum serocluster 123 from Waukegan and Webster soils was evaluated in growth pouches using a root-tip marking procedure. The native rhizobia were from soils incubated 0–8 h in soybean root exudate (SRE) or plant nutrient solution (PNS) prior to inoculation. Populations of serocluster 123 strains in soil and nodule occupancy by these strains were assessed using fluorescent antibodies prepared against B. japonicum USDA 123. There were no significant differences in populations that came from SRE or PNS incubated soils: both populations increased in number over the incubation period. Nodule occupancy by both populations in growth pouches was similar to that previously encountered in field studies with these two soils. With the Waukegan soil, the serocluster 123 population dominated nodulation forming 69 and 62% of taproot nodules above and below the root tip mark, respectively. However, for the more alkaline Webster soil, serocluster 123 strains were much less competitive, producing only 9 and 13%, respectively, of the nodules formed above and below the root tip mark. In growth pouches, soil populations of bradyrhizobia from the Webster soil produced significantly more nodules than those from the Waukegan soil, but both strains and a pure culture of USDA 110 had a similar distribution of nodules.  相似文献   

2.
The mechanism of host-symbiont recognition in the soybean-Rhizobium symbiosis was investigated utilizing mutants of R. japonicum defective in nodulation. Soybeans were grown in clear plastic growth pouches allowing the identification of the area on the root most susceptible to Rhizobium nodulation; the area between the root tip (RT) and smallest emergent root hair (SERH). The location of nodules in relation to this developing zone is an indication of the rate of nodule initiation. Nodules were scored as to the distance from the RT mark made at the time of inoculation. Seventy-eight per cent of the plants nodulate above the RT mark when inoculated with the wild type R. japonicum strain 3I1b110 with the average distance of the uppermost nodule being approximately 2 millimeters above the RT mark. These data indicate that the wild type strain initiates nodulation rapidly within the RT-SERH zone following inoculation. However, inoculation with the slow-to-nodulate mutant strain HS111 resulted in 100% of the plants nodulating only below the RT mark with the average distance of the uppermost nodule being approximately 56 millimeters below the RT mark. Thus, mutant strain HS111 is defective in the ability to rapidly initiate infection leading to nodulation within the RT-SERH zone. The location of the nodules suggest that stain HS111 must `adapt' to the root environment before nodulation can occur. To test this, strain HS111 was incubated in soybean root exudate prior to inoculation. In this case, 68% of the plants nodulated above the RT mark with the average distance of the uppermost nodule being approximately 1 millimeter below the RT mark. Experiments indicated that the change in nodule initiation by strain HS111 brought about by incubation in soybean root exudate was due to a phenotypic, rather than a genotypic change. The half-time of root exudate incubation for strain HS111 necessary for optimal nodulation enhancement was less than 6 hours. Heat sensitivity and trypsin sensitivity of the nodulation enhancement factor(s) in soybean root exudate indicate a protein was involved in the reversal of the delay in nodulation by mutant strain HS111.  相似文献   

3.
The root nodule locations of six Bradyrhizobium japonicum strains were examined to determine if there were any differences which might explain their varying competitiveness for nodule occupancy on Glycine max. When five strains were added to soybeans in plastic growth pouches in equal proportions with a reference strain (U.S. Department of Agriculture, strain 110), North Carolina strain 1028 and strain 110 were the most competitive for nodule occupancy, followed by U.S. Department of Agriculture strains 122, 76, and 31 and Brazil strain 587. Among all strains, nodule double occupancy was 17% at a high inoculum level (107 CFU pouch−1) and 2% at a low inoculum level (104 CFU pouch−1). The less competitive strains increased their nodule representation by an increase in the doubly occupied nodules at the high inoculum level. Among all strains, the number of taproot and lateral root nodules was inversely related at both the high and low inoculum levels (r = −0.62 and −0.69, respectively; P = 0.0001). This inverse relationship appeared to be a result of the plant host control of bacterial infection. Among each of the six strains, greater than 95% of the taproot nodules formed at the high inoculum density were located on 25% of the taproot length, the nodules centering on the position of the root tip at the time of inoculation. No differences among the six strains were observed in nodule initiation rates as measured by taproot nodule position. Taproot nodules were formed in the symbiosis before lateral root nodules. One of the poorly competitive strains (strain 76) occupied three times as many taproot nodules as lateral root nodules when competing with strain 110 (nodules were harvested from 4-week-old plants). Among these six wild-type strains of B. japonicum, competitive ability evidently is not related to nodule initiation rates.  相似文献   

4.
The initiation of Rhizobium infections and the development of nodules on the primary root of soybean Glycine max L. Merr cv Williams seedlings are strongly affected by exposure of the cotyledons/hypocotyls to light. Seedlings in plastic growth pouches were inoculated with R. japonicum in dim light and the position of the root tip of each seedling was marked on the face of the pouch. The pouches were covered and kept in the dark for various times before exposing the upper portions of the plants (cotyledons and hypocotyls) to light. Maximum nodulation occurred if the plants were kept in the dark until 1 day after inoculation. The exposure of plants to light 2 days before inoculation reduced the number of nodules by 50% while the number of nodules was reduced by 70% if the plants were kept in the dark until 7 days after inoculation. Anatomical studies revealed that exposure to light prior to inoculation reduced both the number of infection centers with visible infection threads and the number of infections which developed nodule meristems. Plants kept in the dark for 7 days after inoculation formed a normal number of infection threads above the root tip mark, but very few of these infections developed a nodule meristem. It appears that light stimulates soybean to produce substances which can both inhibit the formation of infection threads and enhance the development of nodules from established infection threads. The effects of light on nodulation appear to be expressed independently of the Rhizobium-induced suppression of nodule formation in younger regions of the root.  相似文献   

5.
The displacement of indigenous Bradyrhizobium japonicum in soybean nodules with more effective strains offers the possibility of enhanced N2 fixation in soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.). Our objective was to determine whether the wild soybean (G. soja Sieb. & Zucc.) genotype PI 468397 would cause reduced competitiveness of important indigenous B. japonicum strains USDA 31, 76, and 123 and thereby permit nodulation by Rhizobium fredii, the fast-growing microsymbiont of soybean. In an initial experiment, PI 468397 nodulated and fixed moderate amounts of N2 with USDA 31 and 76 but, despite the formation of nodules, fixed essentially no N2 with USDA 123. In contrast, PI 468397 formed a highly effective symbiosis with R. fredii strain USDA 193. In two subsequent experiments, Williams soybean and PI 468397 were grown in a pasteurized soil mixture or in soybean rhizobium-free soil and inoculated with both USDA 123 and USDA 193. In each experiment, more than 90% of the nodules of Williams contained USDA 123, while only a maximum of 2% were occupied with USDA 193. In contrast, in the two experiments, 16 and 11%, respectively, of the nodules produced on PI 468397 were occupied by USDA 123, while in both experiments 87% contained USDA 193. Thus, in relation to the cultivar Williams, which is commonly grown and used as a parent in soybean breeding programs in the United States, PI 468397 substantially reduced the competitive ability of B. japonicum strain USDA 123 in relation to R. fredii strain USDA 193.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of five Thai soybean cultivars on nodulation competitiveness of four Bradyrhizobium japonicum strains was investigated. Cultures of B. japonicum strains THA5, THA6, USDA110 and SEMIA5019 were mixed with each other prior to inoculating germinated soybean seeds growing in Leonard jars with nitrogen-free nutrient solution. At harvest, nodule occupancy by each strain was determined by a fluorescent antibody technique. The term ‘general competitive ability’ was introduced to describe the average competitive nodule occupancy of a strain in paired co-inoculation with a number of strains on soybean. The nodule occupancies by an individual strain were directly correlated with the proportions of that strain in the inoculum mixtures. USDA110 showed higher nodulation competitiveness than the other strains on three of the five cultivars. The Thai strain THA6 appeared to be more competitive than USDA110 on cultivar SJ5. Thus, nodulation competitiveness of the B. japonicum strains was affected by the cultivars of soybean used. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

7.
The nodulation characteristics of soybean (Glycine max) mutant nts382 are described. The mutant nodulated significantly more than the parent cultivar Bragg in the presence and absence of several combined nitrogen sources (KNO3, urea, NH4Cl, and NH4NO3). The number of nodules on the tap root and on lateral roots was increased in the mutant line. In the presence of KNO3 and urea, nitrogenase activity was considerably higher in nts382 than in Bragg. Mutant plants were generally smaller than wild-type plants. Although nts382 is a supernodulator, inoculation with Rhizobium japonicum was necessary to induce nodule formation and both trial strains CB1809 (= USDA136) and USDA110 elicited the mutant phenotype. Segregation of M3 progeny derived from a M2 wild-type plant indicated that the mutant character is inherited as a Mendelian recessive. The mutant is discussed in the context of regulation of nodulation and of hypotheses that have been proposed to explain nitrate inhibition of nodulation.  相似文献   

8.
Strains in Bradyrhizobium japonicum serocluster 123 are the major indigenous competitors for nodulation in a large portion of the soybean production area of the United States. Serocluster 123 is defined by the serotype strains USDA 123, USDA 127, and USDA 129. The objective of the work reported here was to evaluate the ability of two soybean genotypes, PI 377578 and PI 417566, to restrict the nodulation and reduce the competitiveness of serotype strains USDA 123, USDA 127, and USDA 129 in favor of the highly effective strain CB1809 and to determine how these soybean genotypes alter the competitive relationships among the three serotype strains in the serocluster. The soybean genotypes PI 377578 and PI 417566 along with the commonly grown cultivar Williams were planted in soil essentially free of soybean rhizobia and inoculated with single-strain treatments of USDA 123, USDA 127, USDA 129, or CB1809 and six dual-strain competition treatments of USDA 123, USDA 127, or USDA 129 versus CB1809, USDA 123 versus USDA 127, USDA 123 versus USDA 129, and USDA 127 versus USDA 129. PI 377578 severely reduced the nodulation and competitiveness of USDA 123 and USDA 127, while PI 417566 similarly affected the nodulation and competitiveness of USDA 129. Thus, the two soybean genotypes can reduce the nodulation and competitiveness of each of the three serocluster 123 serotype strains. Our results indicate that host control of restricted nodulation and reduced competitiveness is quite specific and effectively discriminates between B. japonicum strains which are serologically related.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of preexposure of soybean (Glycine max L. Merrill) roots to Rhizobium japonicum strains and subsequent establishment of other strains in the nodules were investigated by using combinations of effective strains (USDA 110 and USDA 138) and effective-ineffective strains (USDA 110 and SM-5). Strain USDA 110 was a better competitor than either USDA 138 or SM-5 on cultivars Lee and Peking. However, when either of the two less-competitive strains was inoculated into 2-day-old seedlings before USDA 110 was, their nodule occupancy increased significantly on both cultivars. With USDA 138 as the primary inoculum and USDA 110 delayed for 6, 48, and 168 h, the incidence of USDA 138 nodules increased on cultivar Peking from 6% (at zero time) to 28, 70, and 82% and on cultivar Lee from 17% (at zero time) to 32, 88, and 95% for the three time delays, respectively. Preexposure of 2-week-old roots of cultivar Lee to USDA 138 had essentially the same effect: the incidence of USDA 138 nodules increased from 23% at zero time to 89 and 97% when USDA 110 was delayed for 24 and 72 h, respectively. When the ineffective strain SM-5 was used as the primary inoculum, followed by USDA 110 72 h later, the percentage of nodules containing SM-5 increased from 7 to 76%. These results indicate that the early events in the nodulation process of soybeans are perhaps the most critical for competition among R. japonicum strains.  相似文献   

10.
The infectible cells of soybean roots appear to be located at any given time just above the zone of root elongation and just below the position of the smallest emergent root hairs. The location of infectible cells on the primary root at the time of inoculation was inferred from the position of subsequent nodule development, correcting for displacement of epidermal cells due to root elongation. Marks were made on the seedling growth pouches at the time of inoculation to indicate the position of the root tip and the zones of root hair development. Virtually all of the seedlings developed nodules on the primary root above the marks made at the root tips at the time of inoculation. None of the plants formed nodules on the root where mature root hairs were present at the time of inoculation. These results and profiles of nodulation frequency indicate that the location of infectible cells is developmentally restricted. When inoculations were delayed for intervals of 1 to 4 hours after marking the positions of the root tips, progressively fewer nodules were formed above the root tip marks, and the uppermost of these nodules were formed at progressively shorter distances above the marks. These results indicate that the infectibility of given host cells is a transient property that appears and then is lost within a few hours. The results also indicate that host responses leading to infection and nodulation are triggered or initiated in less than 2 hours after inoculation. The extent of nodulation above the root tip mark increased in proportion to the logarithm of the number of bacteria in the inoculum.  相似文献   

11.
In the American Midwest, superior inoculant rhizobia applied to soybeans usually occupy only 5 to 20% of nodules, and response to inoculation is the exception rather than the rule. Attempts to overcome this problem have met with limited success. We evaluated the ability of Bradyrhizobium japonicum, supplied as a seed coat inoculant, to stay abreast of the infectible region of the developing soybean root system. The rhizoplane population of the inoculant strain declined with distance from site of placement, the decrease being more pronounced on lateral than on taproots. This decline was paralleled by a decrease in inoculant-strain nodule occupancy. Inoculant bradyrhizobia contributed little to nodulation of lateral roots, which at pod-fill accounted for more than 50% of nodule number and mass, and were major contributors to acetylene reduction activity. From these data, it appears that inoculant bradyrhizobia are competitive with indigenous soil strains at the point of placement in the soil but have limited mobility and so are incapable of sustaining high populations throughout the developing root system. The result is low nodule occupancy by the inoculant strain in the tapand lateral roots. Future studies should address aspects of inoculant placement and establishment.  相似文献   

12.
Two field experiments were established to assess the competitiveness of foreign bradyrhizobia in infecting the promiscuous soybean cultivar TGX 536-02D. Seeds were inoculated with antibiotic mutants of the bradyrhizobia strains before planting after land preparation. Soybean plants were harvested at pre-determined days after planting for estimating nodule number, nodule dry weight, nodule occupancy, shoot dry weight and seed yield. Results show that nodule number and dry weight significantly increased and showed great variability at 84 days after planting (DAP), probably due to differences in the ability of inoculant bradyrhizobia to form nodules with the soybean cultivar TGX 536-02D. Increased shoot dry weight, %N, total N and seed yield were a result of increased nodulation by the effective and competitive inoculant Bradyrhizobium strains. Strain USDA 110 occupied the highest percentage of nodule sites because it was more competitive than the other Bradyrhizobium strains. These results show that there was high potential for increasing growth and seed yield of the promiscuous soybean cultivar TGX 536-02D by inoculation with foreign Bradyrhizobium strains.  相似文献   

13.
It was previously demonstrated that there are no indigenous strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum forming nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbioses with soybean plants in arable field soils in Poland. However, bacteria currently classified within this species are present (together with Bradyrhizobium canariense) as indigenous populations of strains specific for nodulation of legumes in the Genisteae tribe. These rhizobia, infecting legumes such as lupins, are well established in Polish soils. The studies described here were based on soybean nodulation field experiments, established at the Poznań University of Life Sciences Experiment Station in Gorzyń, Poland, and initiated in the spring of 1994. Long-term research was then conducted in order to study the relation between B. japonicum USDA 110 and USDA 123, introduced together into the same location, where no soybean rhizobia were earlier detected, and nodulation and competitive success were followed over time. Here we report the extra-long-term saprophytic survival of B. japonicum strains nodulating soybeans that were introduced as inoculants 20 years earlier and where soybeans were not grown for the next 17 years. The strains remained viable and symbiotically competent, and molecular and immunochemical methods showed that the strains were undistinguishable from the original inoculum strains USDA 110 and USDA 123. We also show that the strains had balanced numbers and their mobility in soil was low. To our knowledge, this is the first report showing the extra-long-term persistence of soybean-nodulating strains introduced into Polish soils and the first analyzing the long-term competitive relations of USDA 110 and USDA 123 after the two strains, neither of which was native, were introduced into the environment almost 2 decades ago.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of several biotic and abiotic factors on the pattern of competition between two strains of Rhizobium japonicum was examined. In two Minnesota soils, Waseca and Waukegan, strain USDA 123 occupied 69% (Waseca) and 24% (Waukegan) of the root nodules on Glycine max L. Merrill cv. Chippewa. USDA 110 occupied 2% of the root nodules in the Waseca soil and 12% of the nodules in the Waukegan soil. Under a variety of other growth conditions—vermiculite, vermiculite amended with Waseca soil, and two Hawaiian soils devoid of naturalized Rhizobium japonicum strains—USDA 110 was more competitive than USDA 123. The addition of nitrate to or the presence of antibiotic-producing actinomycetes in the rhizosphere of soybeans did not affect the pattern of competition between the two strains. However, preexposure of young seedings to USDA 110 or USDA 123 before transplantation into soil altered the pattern of competition between the two strains significantly. In the Waseca soil, preexposure of cv. Chippewa to USDA 110 for 72 h increased the percentage of nodules occupied by USDA 110 from 2 to 55%. Similarly, in the Hawaiian soil Waimea, nodule occupancy by USDA 123 increased from 7 to 33% after a 72-h preexposure.  相似文献   

15.
Soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] forms a symbiosis with serogroups of Bradyrhizobium japonicum that differ in their dinitrogen fixing abilities. The objectives of this study were to identify soybean genotypes that would restrict nodulation by relatively inefficient serogroups indigenous to a large portion of the southeastern USA, and then characterize the nodulation responses of selected genotypes with specific bradyrhizobial strains under controlled conditions. From field screening trials followed by controlled single and competitive inoculations of serogroups USDA 31, 76 and 110, twelve soybean genotypes out of 382 tested were identified with varying levels of exclusion abilities. Soybean nodule occupancies and nodulation characteristics were influenced by plant genotype, environment (i.e. field or greenhouse), bradyrhizobial serogroup, and location of nodules (i.e. tap or lateral root). The cultivar Centennial sustains high seed yields even though it nodulates to a high degree with the inefficient serogroup USDA 31. In contrast, data from the released cultivars Braxton, Centennial and Coker 368 indicate that they may have been selected to exclude the inefficient serogroup USDA 76 from their tap root nodules, possibly contributing to high seed yield.  相似文献   

16.
Cells of Bradyrhizobium japonicum were grown in media containing either 1.0 mM or 0.5 μM phosphorus. In growth pouch experiments, infection of the primary root of soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) by B. japonicum USDA 31, 110, and 142 was significantly delayed when P-limited cells were applied to the root. In a greenhouse experiment, B. japonicum USDA 31, 110, 122, and 142 grown with sufficient and limiting P were used to inoculate soybeans which were grown with either 5 μM or 1 mM P nutrient solution. P-limited cells of USDA 31 and 110 formed significantly fewer nodules than did P-sufficient cells, but P-limited cells of USDA 122 and 142 formed more nodules than P-sufficient cells. The increase in nodule number by P-limited cells of USDA 142 resulted in significant increases in both nodule mass and shoot total N. In plants grown with 1 mM P, inoculation with P-limited cells of USDA 110 resulted in lower total and specific nitrogenase activities than did inoculation with P-sufficient cells. Nodule numbers, shoot dry weights, and total N and P were all higher in plants grown with 1 mM P, and plants inoculated with USDA 31 grew poorly relative to plants receiving strains USDA 110, 122, and 142. Although the effects of soybean P nutrition were more obvious than those of B. japonicum P nutrition, we feel that it is important to develop an awareness of the behavior of the bacterial symbiont under conditions of nutrient limitation similar to those found in many soils.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Nodulation, acetylene reduction activity, dry matter accumulation, and total nitrogen accumulation by nodulated plants growing in a nitrogen-free culture system were used to compare the symbiotic effectiveness of the fast-growing Rhizobium fredii USDA 191 with that of the slow-growing Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110 in symbiosis with five soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) cultivars. Measurement of the amount of nitrogen accumulated during a 20-day period of vegetative growth (28 to 48 days after transplanting) showed that USDA 110 fixed 3.7, 39.1, 4.6, and 57.3 times more N2 than did USDA 191 with cultivars Pickett 71, Harosoy 63, Lee, and Ransom as host plants, respectively. With the unimproved Peking cultivar as the host plant, USDA 191 fixed 3.3 times more N2 than did the USDA 110 during the 20-day period. The superior N2 fixation capability of USDA 110 with the four North American cultivars as hosts resulted primarily from higher nitrogenase activity per unit nodule mass (specific acetylene reduction activity) and higher nodule mass per plant. The higher N2-fixation capability of USDA 191 with the Peking cultivar as host resulted primarily from higher nodule mass per plant, which was associated with higher nodule numbers. There was significant variation in the N2-fixation capabilities of the four North American cultivar-USDA 191 symbioses. Pickett 71 and Lee cultivars fixed significantly more N2 in symbiosis with USDA 191 than did the Harosoy 63 and Ransom cultivars. This quantitative variation in N2-fixation capability suggests that the total incompatibility (effectiveness of nodulation and efficiency of N2 fixation) of host soybean plants and R. fredii strains is regulated by more than one host plant gene. These results indicate that it would not be prudent to introduce R. fredii strains into North American agricultural systems until more efficient N2-fixing symbioses between North American cultivars and these fast-growing strains can be developed. When inoculum containing equal numbers of USDA 191 and of strain USDA 110 was applied to the unimproved Peking cultivar in Perlite pot culture, 85% of the 160 nodules tested were occupied by USDA 191. With Lee and Ransom cultivars, 99 and 85% of 140 and 96 nodules tested, respectively, were occupied by USDA 110.  相似文献   

19.
Heron DS  Pueppke SG 《Plant physiology》1987,84(4):1391-1396
Double inoculation (15 h apart) of the soybean cultivar Williams with Bradyrhizobium japonicum I-110ARS reveals a rapid regulatory plant response that inhibits nodulation of distal portions of the primary root (M Pierce, WD Bauer 1984 Plant Physiol 73: 286-290). Only living, homologous rhizobia elicit the response. We conducted similar double inoculation experiments to test the hypothesis that this is a universal phenomenon in soybean symbioses. We investigated interactions of the cultivar McCall with the slow-growing strain Bradyrhizobium sp. 3185 (=3G4b16) and strains of the fast-growing soybean symbiont, Rhizobium fredii (USDA191 [Nod+ on McCall] and USDA257 [Nod on McCall]). Nodulation was not detectably inhibited when USDA257 was included in various combinations with an inoculum of USDA191. Strain USDA257 cohabited nodules with strain USDA191 when plants were inoculated sequentially with both strains, but USDA257 did not nodulate McCall when a sterile culture filtrate of USDA191 was added to USDA257 inoculum. There was only a slight inhibition of nodulation of distal portions of the primary root in double inoculation experiments with McCall and strain 3185. Because these results were unexpected, we repeated the experiments with Williams and strain I-110ARS. The response was similar to that observed in the McCall × 3185 interaction. Regulation of nodulation on the primary root thus appears to be variable and depend on strain X cultivar interactions.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The ecology, strain evaluation, genetics of host strain interactions and physiology of nitrogen fixation ofRhizobium japonicum in association with the soybean,Glycine max, were studied. Results of inoculation experiments with selected strains ofRhizobium japonicum indicated that indigenous strains occupied most of the nodules of soybeans grown in highRhizobium japonicum populated soils. Nodule sampling indicated that inoculation did not result in quicker nodulation or a higher incidence of root nodules (primary or secondary) than uninoculated checks. Rhizosphere studies indicated that colonization by introduced strains did occur but did not compete successfully with field strains for nodule sites. Recovery of specific serological types from nodules was influenced by planting intervals. The distribution of the serotypes varied with the time of planting and the age of the plant. Temperature studies indicated that the distribution of serotypes recovered from the nodules was influenced by temperature. Field studies showed the selectivity of soybean genotypes on strains ofRhizobium japonicum. Some strains were more common in the nodules of some varieties than in others. Closely related varieties had similar populations in their nodules. Three genes which control nodule response in soybeans are reported. Nitrogen fixation profiles were determined for some variety-strain interactions. Combinations previously classified as inefficient showed some nitrogenase activity as measured by the acetylene reduction technique. Research Microbiologist; Research Agronomist; Research Plant Physiologist, Soybean Investigations, Crops Research Division, Beltsville, Md. (USDA, ARS); and Plant Pathologist currently located at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.  相似文献   

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