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Resistance of bacterial communities in the potato rhizosphere to disturbance and its application to agroecology
Institution:1. A&L Biologicals, 2136 Jet Stream Rd., London, ON N5V 3P5, Canada;2. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Western University, London, ON N6A 5B7, Canada;1. Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London, 14 Princes Gardens, South Kensington, London SW7 1NA, United Kingdom;2. Faculty of Mining, Geology and Petroleum Engineering, University of Zagreb, Pierottijeva 6, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia;3. Production and Resource Economics, Center of Life and Food Sciences, Weihenstephan, Technical University Munich, Germany;1. International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Oyo Road, PMB 5320, Ibadan, Nigeria;2. Biotechnology Center, University of Yaoundé I, P.O. Box. 3851, Messa, Yaoundé, Cameroon;3. ETH Zurich, Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Eschikon 33, CH-8315 Lindau, Switzerland;4. Institute of Microbiology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Videnska 1083, 14220 Praha 4, Czech Republic
Abstract:Soil bacteria have the ability to increase agricultural sustainability through the production of biopesticides and biofertilizers. Application of bacteria to field crops often results in sporadic colonization and unpredictable crop performance. This research sought to understand the colonization of the potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) rhizosphere using reciprocal transplants. Plants were grown in a forest or an agricultural soil and then transplanted into either the same soil or the opposite soil. Bacterial communities were profiled using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (TRFLP) and analyzed using pairwise comparisons. The results revealed that the bacterial community that colonized the rhizosphere in the first soil remained mostly intact for 30 days after the plants were transplanted into another soil in which the soil bacteria community differed from that found in the original soil. The concept that it may be possible to establish a functional microbiota and to deliver it to an agricultural environment was tested. A nitrogen-fixing bacterial community was established on plants grown under tissue culture conditions and the plants were transplanted into a field soil. Plants inoculated with eight separate nitrogen-fixing communities showed an average fivefold increase in dry biomass when compared to mock-inoculated plants and the microbial profiles remained distinct at 30 days after transplantation. These results demonstrate that the plant rhizosphere is a resistant community and that the first bacterial community that becomes established on the root remains with the plant even when the plant is placed into soil with a vastly different microbiota.
Keywords:Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism  TRFLP  Rhizosphere  Reciprocal transplant  Nitrogen fixing bacteria
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