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1.
The combination of nitrogen and Azospirillum can ensure greater nutrient absorption and crop yield in agricultural areas using high technology. Thus, the objective was to evaluate maize response to Azopirillum brasilense (AZ) inoculation and nutrient (macronutrients and micronutrients) application under greenhouse and field conditions in clay and sandy soils of the Brazilian Cerrado. In the greenhouse assays, the following parameters were measured: shoot dry weight (SDW), root dry weight (RDW), and root volume (RV). In the field experiments, the maize yield was determined after drying the grains at 60 °C for 48 h. In clay soil, there was a significant increase in the SDW, RDW and RV in the treatment with AZ concentrated (1011 cells ml−1 of inoculum) when compared with the control treatment and the treatment with AZ diluted (106 cells ml−1 of inoculum). In this soil, adding micronutrients did not affect the maize response under greenhouse conditions. In sandy soil, there was no difference between the AZ treatment and the control, except for treatments where nutrients and AZ were both added leading to a significant increase in the maize response. In both soils, the RV:RDW ratio was higher in the treatment with AZ concentrated compared to that in the treatment with AZ diluted, but the yield response depended on the addition of nutrients. Inoculation with A. brasilense gave comparable yield to the nitrogen treatment. The grain production was increased by 29% in the treatment with A. brasilense and nitrogen compared to nitrogen fertilization alone. In this study, the yield response was affected significantly when maize was inoculated with A. brasilense, but this response was dependent on the soil type under greenhouse conditions.  相似文献   

2.
The wide use of pesticides in modern agriculture may cause side effects on the non-target microflora. Data on the fungicide Tebuconazole effects on Azospirillum-wheat association are scarce. We analyzed the effects of Tebuconazole on: (a) Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 growth in pure culture, (b) A. brasilense Sp245 colonization of Triticum aestivum cv ProINTA Oasis roots, (c) A. brasilense Sp245-inoculated seedlings growth under normal and water stress conditions in the presence of 20% polyethylene glycol 8000. Seeds were separated in Tebuconazole-free and Tebuconazole-treated lots. Inoculated and non-inoculated seedlings were grown in hydroponics in the dark at 20 °C for 72 h. Root surface, coleoptile length, fresh and dry (DW) weights in both tissues and diazotrophic bacterial most probable number in roots were determined. Water contents and shoot-to-roots DW ratio were calculated. Neither Azospirillum growth nor root colonization was affected by Tebuconazole. Under normal growth conditions most of the growth parameters analyzed, revealed a clear positive effect of A. brasilense on wheat seedlings up to 72 h treatments. The characteristic Azospirillum enhancing effects observed on roots remained unaltered by Tebuconazole. The present study shows that Tebuconazole is compatible with A. brasilense Sp245-wheat inoculation.  相似文献   

3.
The beneficial effects of inoculating with Azospirillum brasilense on crop productivity have been widely described, but extensive use in typical agricultural field environments is scarcely documented. The objective of this study was to quantify the productivity of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) whose seed was inoculated with a liquid formulation containing Azospirillum brasilense INTA Az-39 strain under typical dryland farming conditions. The study was performed in the 2002–2006 growing seasons, evaluating inoculated and non-inoculated seed at 297 experimental locations in the Pampas region of Argentina. The inoculated crops exhibited more vigorous vegetative growth, with both greater shoot and root dry matter accumulation (12.9 and 22.0%, respectively). The inoculation increased the number of harvested grains by 6.1%, and grain yield by 260 kg ha?1 (8.0%). Positive responses were determined in about 70% of the sites, depending mostly on the attainable yield and independently of fertilization and other crop and soil management practices. In general, more response to inoculation was observed in the absence of major crop growth limitations, suggesting the complementary contribution of the Azospirillum brasilense treatment to more efficiently developing higher yielding wheat.  相似文献   

4.
Polyamines are considered as plant growth regulating compounds; among them, cadaverine has been correlated with root growth promotion or osmotic stress mitigation in some plant species. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the capacity of bacterial Azospirillum brasilense Az39 strain to produce cadaverine in chemically defined medium and inoculated plants, and to correlate this capacity with root growth promotion or osmotic stress mitigation in hydroponics conditions. To evaluate cadaverine production in chemically defined medium A. brasilense Az39 was cultivated aerobically at 30 °C and 80 rpm in NFb medium or NFb-l supplemented with the precursor l-lysine. To evaluate the bacterial cadaverine production and growth promotion in plants, rice (Oryza sativa L.) cv. El Paso 144 seedlings were inoculated and hydroponically cultured under optimal conditions in growth chamber. In both, cadaverine was identified and quantified by dansyl-derivative method using a fluorescence-HPLC system, and lysine decarboxylase (LDC) activity was determined by 14CO2 production in a closed tube system fed with [14C]-lysine. To evaluate the possible role of bacterial cadaverine in osmotic stress conditions, abscisic acid (ABA) production was analyzed in rice seedlings hydroponically cultured under 0 (no stress), ?0.47 (stress) or ?0.82 (severe stress) MPa osmotic potential generated by mannitol, with the addition of 1 nM or 1 μM cadaverine or A. brasilense Az39 inoculation. Our results indicate that A. brasilense Az39 promoted root growth and helped mitigate osmotic stress in rice seedlings, due in part to cadaverine production.  相似文献   

5.
Biochar’s role on greenhouse gas emission and plant growth has been well addressed. However, there have been few studies on changes in soil microbial community and activities with biochar soil amendment (BSA) in croplands. In a field experiment, biochar was amended at rates of 0, 20 and 40 t ha−1 (C0, C1 and C2, respectively) in May 2010 before rice transplantation in a rice paddy from Sichuan, China. Topsoil (0–15 cm) was collected from the rice paddy while rice harvest in late October 2011. Soil physico-chemical properties and microbial biomass carbon (MBC) and nitrogen (MBN) as well as selected soil enzyme activities were determined. Based on 16S rRNA and 18S rRNA gene, bacterial and fungal community structure and abundance were characterized using terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) combined with clone library analysis, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and quantitative real-time PCR assay (qPCR). Contents of SOC and total N and soil pH were increased but bulk density decreased significantly. While no changes in MBC and MBN, gene copy numbers of bacterial 16S rRNA was shown significantly increased by 28% and 64% and that of fungal 18S rRNA significantly decreased by 35% and 46% under BSA at 20 and 40 t ha−1 respectively over control. Moreover, there was a significant decrease by 70% in abundance of Methylophilaceae and of Hydrogenophilaceae with an increase by 45% in Anaerolineae abundance under BSA at 40 t ha−1 over control. Whereas, using sequencing DGGE bands of fungal 18S rRNA gene, some bands affiliated with Ascomycota and Glomeromycota were shown inhibited by BSA at rate of 40 t ha−1. Significant increases in activities of dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatases while decreased β-glucosidase were also observed under BSA. The results here indicated a shift toward a bacterial dominated microbial community in the rice paddy with BSA.  相似文献   

6.
Soil microbial biomass carbon (SMBC) and nitrogen (SMBN), soil microbial community structure, and crop yields were studied in a long-term (1982–2004) fertilization experiment carried out in Suining, Sichuan province of PR China. Eight treatments included three chemical fertilizer (CF) treatments (N, NP, NPK), three CF + farmyard manure (M) treatments (NM, NPM, NPKM), M alone and no fertilizer (CK) as control. The results showed that the soil microbial biomass was higher in soil treated with CFM than in soil treated with CF alone, and that NPKM gave the highest rice and wheat yields. The SMBC and SMBN were higher after rice than those after wheat cropping. SMBC correlated closely with soil organic matter. Average yields of wheat and rice for 22 years were higher and more stable in the fertilized plots than in control plots. Bacterial community structure was analyzed by PCR-DGGE targeting eubacterial 16S rRNA genes. A higher diversity of the soil bacterial community was found in soil amended with CFM than in other fertilizer treatments. Some specific band emerged in the soil amended with M. The highest diversity of bacterial communities was found in the NPKM treated soil. The bacterial community structures differed in rice and wheat plots. Sequencing of PCR products separated in DGGE showed that some of the common and dominant bands were closely related to Aquicella lusitana and to Acidobacteria. This study demonstrated that mixed application of N, P, and K with additional M amendment increased soil microbial biomass, diversified the bacterial communities and maintained the crop production in the Calcareous Purplish Paddy soil.  相似文献   

7.
Nucleic acid-based techniques allow the exploration of microbial communities in the environments such as the rhizosphere. Azospirillumbrasilense, a plant growth promoting rhizobacterium (PGPR), causes morphological changes in the plant root system. These changes in root physiology may indirectly affect the microbial diversity of the rhizosphere. In this study, the changes in the rhizobacterial structure following A. brasilense inoculation of maize (Zea mays) plants was examined by PCR-denaturating gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (ARISA), using two universal primers sets for the 16S rRNA gene, and an intergenic 16S-23S rDNA primer set, respectively. Similar results were obtained when using either ARISA or DGGE performed with these different primer sets, and analyzed by different statistical methods: no prominent effect of A. brasilense inoculation was observed on the bacterial communities of plant roots grown in two different soils and in different growth systems. In contrast, plant age caused significant shifts in the bacterial populations.  相似文献   

8.
Sorghum (S. bicolor L. Moench cv. Bok 8) plants were grown in soil or sand-perlite low in plant-available N and P. Plants were inoculated with a vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus, or a strain of Azospirillum brasilense or both endophytes together. Plants received a nutrient solution which did not contain N or P. Increases in plant dry weight, shoot-to-root ratios, and the N content of dually-infected plants could be accounted for by summing the VAM and Azospirillum effects. For sorghum inoculated with both endophytes, the presence of A. brasilense in the rhizosphere increased VAM colonization and biomass, while the N input due to Azospirillum decreased, possibly due to competition for carbohydrates.Comparisons between sorghum grown with or without VAM-fungal infection in four growth media showed that edaphic factors other than P availability determined the host response to VAM infection. The P-fixing capacity of the soil, rather than the amount of available (NaHCO3-extractable) P, influenced the balance between mutualistic and parasitic VAM-fungal growth.  相似文献   

9.
We have been making year-round measurements of mass and energy exchange in three cropping systems: (a) irrigated continuous maize, (b) irrigated maize–soybean rotation, and (c) rainfed maize–soybean rotation in eastern Nebraska since 2001. In this paper, we present results on evapotranspiration (ET) of these crops for the first 5 years of our study. Growing season ET in the irrigated and rainfed maize averaged 548 and 482 mm, respectively. In irrigated and rainfed soybean, the average growing season ET was 452 and 431 mm, respectively. On average, the maize ET was higher than the soybean ET by 18% for irrigated crops and by 11% for rainfed crops. The mid-season crop coefficient Kc (=ET/ET0 and ET0 is the reference ET) for irrigated maize was 1.03 ± 0.07. For rainfed maize, significant dry-down conditions prevailed and mid-season Kc was 0.84 ± 0.20. For irrigated soybean, the mid-season Kc was 0.98 ± 0.02. The mid-season dry down in rainfed soybean years was not severe and the Kc (0.90 ± 0.13) was only slightly lower than the values for the irrigated fields. Non-growing season evaporation ranged from 100 to 172 mm and contributed about 16–28% of the annual ET in irrigated/rainfed maize and 24–26% in irrigated/rainfed soybean. The amount of surface mulch biomass explained 71% of the variability in non-growing season evaporation totals. Water use efficiency (or biomass transpiration efficiency), defined as the ratio of total plant biomass (YDM) to growing season transpiration (T) was 5.20 ± 0.34 and 5.22 ± 0.36 g kg?1, respectively for irrigated and rainfed maize crops. Similarly, the biomass transpiration efficiency for irrigated and rainfed soybean crops was 3.21 ± 0.35 and 2.96 ± 0.30 g kg?1. Thus, the respective biomass transpiration efficiency of these crops was nearly constant regardless of rainfall and irrigation.  相似文献   

10.
The largest numbers of the Brazilian traditional upland rice varieties are found in the Maranhão state, Northeast region of Brazil. However, no information is available on the diazotrophic bacterial population associated as well as the plant growth promoting potential when these traditional genotypes are inoculated with native strains. Here, we evaluated the response of ten traditional rice varieties to inoculation with ten diazotrophic strains, previously isolated from rice soil of this region and screened for their ability to produce indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) in vitro. The procedure for selection of the best diazotrophic strain/rice variety interaction involved three steps: gnotobiotic conditions, soil pot and field experiments. The gnotobiotic experiment showed that the Azospirillum amazonense strain AR3122 increased the biomass of the traditional varieties Cana Roxa and Cana Forte (28 and 48%, respectively) while this effect was less evident for the other combination of strains/rice varieties. The soil pot experiment showed that the combination of Burkholderia vietnamiensis strain AR 1122 and traditional variety Arroz 70 was superior to the other strains/varieties and the treatment fertilized with 100 kg N ha−1. The best performance of the Burkholderia vietnamiensis strain AR1122/variety Arroz 70 was confirmed in the field experiment. There was an increase of up 10 and 29% in the grain yield in comparison to both the N fertilization and Herbaspirillum seropedicae ZAE 94 strain treatments, respectively. In contrast, the response of the commercial variety Bonança to inoculation with strain AR1122 was much lower, suggesting that a biofertilizer inoculation program for traditional rice varieties should consider the genetic interaction between strain and rice variety. The diazotrophic B. vietmaniensis strain AR1122 was a good biofertilizer candidate for inoculation of traditional rice varieties and therefore should be used for further studies to confirm the strain-genotype effect envisaging a sustainable rice crop system mainly in the Northeast region of Brazil.  相似文献   

11.
《Applied soil ecology》2011,47(3):335-340
The contribution of plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) of the genus Azospirillum to the plant N budget through biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) is still controversial. The aim of this study was to determine the contribution of BNF by Azospirillum brasilense on pepper grown at different N levels, attained using the 15N natural abundance method. To this end, pepper plants were grown in a growth chamber and treated with A. brasilense combined with Pantoea dispersa and then irrigated at four different N levels (0, 1, 3 and 7 mM NO3). The assimilation of fixed N was clear from the lower δ15N values observed in bacteria-treated plants compared with those of non-bacteria treated plants. The percentage of BNF-derived N decreased with decreasing NO3 levels in the growth medium. BNF contribution to the total nitrogen content of plants was found to be as high as 46%. The results suggest that the bacteria have a potential to supply a considerable amount of N to pepper seedlings, as well as to stimulate plant growth and N uptake when AzospirillumPantoea treatment is combined with low NO3 levels.  相似文献   

12.
Soils of three sites were studied in the Inner Mongolia steppe; one site non-grazed for 26 yr (NG26), another site non-grazed for 6 yr (NG6) and a third site freely grazed all along (FG). The composition of methantrophic communities was characterized by pmoA gene fragments (coding for a subunit of particulate methane monooxygenase) that were PCR amplified from total soil DNA extracts, using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) method. Cluster analysis based on the DGGE band patterns indicated that the methanotrophic communities structure of NG6 and FG soils were similar to each other but different from that of NG26 soil. Sequence analysis showed that most bands belonged to the cluster of USCγ. This is the first report that USCγ cluster is dominated in the grassland soil.  相似文献   

13.
The specificity of the infection of maize, wheat and rice roots by N2-fixing Azospirillum spp was studied in four greenhouse experiments using pots with unsterilized soil and in two field experiments. In all experiments A. lipoferum was most frequently isolated from externally sterilized roots of maize, and A. brasilense nir? (nitrite reductase negative) from wheat and rice. In pot experiments, A. brasilense nir+ was isolated with moderate frequency from within maize roots but rarely from within wheat or rice roots. Inoculation of the pots with a mixture of representative strains of the three Azospirillum groups had no effect on the proportion of strains recovered from each plant species. In the field experiments, inoculation with spontaneous streptomycin-resistant mutants of two of the representative strains confirmed the apparent specificity of A. lipoferum for maize roots and of A. brasilense for wheat but the results were partially obscured by the unexpectedly high proportion of streptomycin-resistant strains isolated from within the roots of uninoculated plants.  相似文献   

14.
Field experiments were conducted during successive rainy seasons in 2006 in the Chau Thanh district of southern Vietnam to evaluate the effects of an inoculant plant growth promoter product called “BioGro” and N fertiliser rates on yield and N and P nutrition of rice. The results indicated that inoculation with BioGro, containing a pseudomonad, two bacilli and a soil yeast, significantly increased grain and straw yields and total N uptake in both seasons, as well as grain quality in terms of percentage N. Nitrogen fertilisation increased grain and straw yields as well as total N and P uptakes significantly in both cropping seasons. The estimated grain yield response to added N was quadratic in nature with and without added BioGro. In the first crop, BioGro out-yielded the control up to 90 kg urea N ha?1 whilst in the second season the beneficial effect of BioGro was observed up to 120 kg urea N ha?1, indicating either an interaction of the inoculant with higher yielding seasonal conditions or a cumulative effect of BioGro application. In the first season, the estimated N rate for maximum grain yield was 103 kg N ha?1 with BioGro while it was 143 kg N ha?1 without BioGro. The maximum estimated grain yields were 3.21 and 3.18 t ha?1 with and without BioGro, respectively. This information indicates that BioGro was able to save 40 kg N ha?1 with an additional rice yield of 30 kg ha?1 in the season. In the second rainy season, the estimated N rates for maximum grain yields were 94 and 97 kg N ha?1 with and without BioGro, respectively. The estimated maximum grain yields were 3.49 and 3.25 t ha?1 with and without BioGro, respectively. The two seasons’ combined results indicate that application of BioGro improved the efficiency of N use by rice significantly, saving 43 kg N ha?1 with an additional rice yield of 270 kg ha?1 in two consecutive seasons at the experimental site. The extra efficiency was shown by the fact that the same yield of rice was obtained with about 40 and 60 kg less fertiliser-N that the maximum yields with urea alone in the two successive harvests on the same plots.  相似文献   

15.
《Soil biology & biochemistry》2001,33(4-5):457-463
The potential enhancement of root growth and nodulation in vegetable soybean (AGS190) was studied with application of Azospirillum brasilense (Sp7) and A. lipoferum (CCM3863) co-inoculated with two Bradyrhizobium japonicum strains (TAL102 and UPMR48). Significant root growth stimulation and nodulation were observed in Azospirillum as well as during its co-inoculation with Bradyrhizobium. Nodule formation is linked with the initiation of new roots; nodules were almost absent even in Bradyrhizobium inoculated plant due to the absence of new roots development in clipped rooted seedlings. Total root length, root number, specific root length, root dry matter, root hair development and shoot dry matter were significantly increased by Azospirillum alone and its co-inoculum. Co-inoculated plants significantly influenced the number of nodules and its fresh weight. A. brasilense seemed to perform better in root growth and nodule development compared to A. lipoferum.  相似文献   

16.
The Azospirillum brasilense genomic region containing the glnBA genes was previously cloned in a broad-host range plasmid named pAB441. Previous results from our laboratory have shown that A. brasilense spontaneous mutants resistant to ethylenediamine carrying this plasmid had no nitrogenase activity. The 19 kb insert of this plasmid was fully sequenced and no other gene potentially involved with nitrogen fixation was identified, nor any gene potentially involved in the regulation of nif genes expression. Apart from glnBA, this region contains several genes involved with different functions: assisting protein folding and degradation, DNA organization, electron transport and energy conversion and conserved hypothetical proteins of unknown function. Since previous data on the literature showed that mutation of clpX gene of A. brasilense resulted in higher nitrogenase activity, we hypothesize that higher expression of the clpX gene from the plasmid pAB441 may be involved with Nif? phenotype of the A. brasilense mutant strains.  相似文献   

17.
Endogeic and juvenile anecic earthworm abundance was measured in soil samples and anecic populations were studied by counting midden numbers at the sites of two long-term cropping systems trials in South-central Wisconsin. The three grain and three forage systems at each site were designed to reflect a range of Midwestern USA production strategies. The primary objectives of this work were to determine if the abundance of endogeic or anecic earthworms varied among cropping systems or crop phases within a cropping system and were there specific management practices that impacted endogeic or anecic earthworm numbers. The earthworms present in the surface soil were: Aporrectodea tuberculata (Eisen), A. caliginosa (Savigny), A. trapezoides (Dugés); and juvenile Lumbricus terrestris (L.). True endogeic abundance was greatest in rotationally grazed pasture [188 m?2 at Arlington (ARL) and 299 m?2 at Elkhorn (ELK)], and smallest in conventional continuous corn (27 m?2 at ARL and 32 m?2 at ELK). The only type of anecic earthworm found was L. terrestris L. There was an average of 1.2 middens per adult anecic earthworm and the population of anecics was greatest in the no-till cash grain system (28 middens m?2 at ARL, 18 m?2 at ELK) and smallest in the conventional continuous corn system (3 middens m?2 at ARL, 1 m?2 at ELK). Earthworm numbers in individual crop phases within a cropping system were too variable from year-to-year to recommend using a single phase to characterize a whole cropping system. Indices for five management factors (tillage, manure inputs, solid stand, pesticide use, and crop diversity) were examined, and manure use and tillage were the most important impacting earthworm numbers across the range of cropping systems. Manure use was the most important management factor affecting endogeic earthworm numbers; but no-tillage was the most important for the juvenile and adult anecic groups and had a significantly positive influence on endogeic earthworm counts as well. The pesticides used, which were among the most commonly applied pesticides in the Midwestern USA, and increasing crop diversity did not have a significant effect on either the endogeic or anecic earthworm groups in this study. Consequently, designing cropping systems that reduce tillage and include manure with less regard to omitting pesticides or increasing crop diversity should enhance earthworm populations and probably improve sustainability.  相似文献   

18.
Water stress, with its negative consequences on plant growth and survival, can be mitigated by Azospirillum brasilense inoculation. In tomato, A. brasilense delays wilting caused by a vascular pathogen, Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. michiganensis, by yet unknown mechanisms. We studied morphological, anatomical and physiological changes induced by A. brasilense in tomato that relate to water stress tolerance, which could explain the deferral in symptom expression. For this purpose, tomato seeds were treated or not with A. brasilense BNM65, and 5 weeks later plants were challenged with C. michiganensis subsp. michiganensis or mock inoculated with water. There was a large growth promotion associated to Azospirillum: treated plants had higher total biomass and leaf area. In relation to water stress tolerance, Azospirillum treated plants had larger xylem vessel area, higher stem specific hydraulic conductivity, thicker stems, and lower shoot/root dry matter and specific leaf area. These changes were opposite to those induced by C. michiganensis subsp. michiganensis. We conclude that A. brasilense favoured a better adjustment of plant-water relations by several mechanisms, and thus, transitorily alleviated symptoms expression of a vascular disease.  相似文献   

19.
《Soil & Tillage Research》2007,93(1):126-137
Although reduced tillage itself is beneficial to soil quality and farm economics, the amount of crop residues returned to the soil will likely alter the success of a particular conservation tillage system within a farm operation. We investigated the impact of three cropping systems (a gradient in silage cropping intensity) on selected soil physical, chemical, and biological properties in the Piedmont of North Carolina, USA. Cropping systems were: (1) maize (Zea mays L.) silage/barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) silage (high silage intensity), (2) maize silage/winter cover crop (medium silage intensity), and (3) maize silage/barley grain—summer cover crop/winter cover crop (low silage intensity). There was an inverse relationship between silage intensity and the quantity of surface residue C and N contents. With time, soil bulk density at a depth of 0–3 cm became lower and total and particulate C and N fractions, and stability of macroaggregates became higher with lower silage intensity as a result of greater crop residue returned to soil. Soil bulk density at 0–3 cm depth was initially 0.88 Mg m−3 and increased to 1.08 Mg m−3 at the end of 7 years under high silage intensity. Total organic C at 0–20 cm depth was initially 11.7 g kg−1 and increased to 14.3 g kg−1 at the end of 7 years under low silage intensity. Stability of macroaggregates at 0–3 cm depth at the end of 7 years was 99% under low silage intensity, 96% under medium silage intensity, and 89% under high silage intensity. Soil microbial biomass C at 0–3 cm depth at the end of 7 years was greater with low silage intensity (1910 mg kg−1) than with high silage intensity (1172 mg kg−1). Less intensive silage cropping (i.e., greater quantities of crop residue returned to soil) had a multitude of positive effects on soil properties, even in continuous no-tillage crop production systems. An optimum balance between short-term economic returns and longer-term investments in improved soil quality for more sustainable production can be achieved in no-tillage silage cropping systems.  相似文献   

20.
Inoculants are biological formulations that combine a stable microorganism population and various types of compounds produced and released during fermentation, such as phytohormones and plant growth regulators. Azospirillum brasilense strain Az39 and Brayrhizobium japonicum strain E109 were previously shown to produce indole 3-acetic acid (IAA), gibberellic acid (GA3) and zeatin (Z). We tested the hypothesis that such compounds are responsible for early growth promotion in inoculated corn (Zea mays L.) and soybean (Glycine max L.) seedlings. Seeds were inoculated with Az39, E109, or both, and kept in a chamber at 20–30 °C under a controlled photoperiod to evaluate seed germination. To evaluate root and shoot length and dry weight, and number of nodules and percentage of nodulated seedlings, in soybean, seedlings were kept in a growth chamber for 14 days under similar photoperiod and temperature conditions. Az39 and E109, singly or in combination, showed the capacity to promote seed germination, nodule formation, and early development of corn and soybean seedlings. Both strains were able to excrete IAA, GA3 and Z into the culture medium, at a concentration sufficient to produce morphological and physiological changes in young seed tissues.  相似文献   

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