Title of article
Symbiotic effectiveness of Bradyrhizobium japonicum in acid soils can be predicted from their sensitivity to acid soil stress factors in acidic agar media
Author/Authors
Indrasumunar، نويسنده , , Arief and Dart، نويسنده , , Peter J. and Menzies، نويسنده , , Neal W.، نويسنده ,
Pages
7
From page
2046
To page
2052
Abstract
In acid soil, low pH, reduced availability of nutrients, and toxicity of Al and Mn limit plant growth and the survival and effectiveness of rhizobia. The symbiosis between legumes and rhizobia is particularly sensitive to acid soil stress. A pot experiment evaluated whether Bradyrhizobium japonicum strain growth on acidic agar media would predict ability to colonize the rhizosphere and form effective nodules in acidic soils. Three Indonesian strains of B. japonicum with similar effectiveness at neutral pH in sand culture but with different tolerance of acid soil stress factors in agar media, and an acid-tolerant commercial strain (CB1809) of comparable effectiveness, were tested in three acid soils using the Al tolerant soybean (Glycine max cv PI 416937). At 7 days after inoculation all strains had achieved large rhizosphere populations, but by day 14 the rhizosphere population of the acid-sensitive strain had decreased, while the more acid-tolerant strains increased. The acid-tolerant strains had significantly greater nodulation and symbiotic effectiveness than plants inoculated with the acid-sensitive strain. Laboratory prescreening of B. japonicum for acid, Al and Mn tolerance in acid media successfully identified strains which were symbiotically competent in low pH soils.
Keywords
BRADYRHIZOBIUM JAPONICUM , acid soil , Soybean N2-fixation , Acid-tolerant rhizobia
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Record number
1999375
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