| Literature DB >> 27188775 |
Abstract
There is increasing interest in the use of beneficial microorganisms as alternatives to chemical pesticides and synthetic fertilisers in agricultural production. Application of beneficial microorganisms to seeds is an efficient mechanism for placement of microbial inocula into soil where they will be well positioned to colonise seedling roots and protect against soil-borne diseases and pests. However, despite the long history of inoculation of legume seeds with Rhizobia spp. and clear laboratory demonstration of the ability of a wide range of other beneficial microorganisms to improve crop performance, there are still very few commercially available microbial seed inoculants. Seed inoculation techniques used for research purposes are often not feasible at a commercial scale and there are significant technical challenges in maintaining viable microbial inocula on seed throughout commercial seed treatment processes and storage. Further research is needed before the benefits of a wide range of environmentally sensitive potential seed inoculants can be captured for use in agriculture, ecosystem restoration and bioremediation. There is no single solution to the challenge of improving the ability of seed inoculants to establish and function consistently in the field. Development of novel formulations that maintain the viability of both inoculant and seed during storage will result from multidisciplinary research in microbial and seed physiology and adjuvant chemistry.Entities:
Keywords: Biopesticide; Formulation; Microbial biomass; Microbial inoculation; Rhizosphere; Seed treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27188775 PMCID: PMC4909795 DOI: 10.1007/s00253-016-7590-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0175-7598 Impact factor: 4.813
Microorganisms used for biological seed treatments in research and pre-commercial trials
| Function/microorganism | Target | Crop | Seed treatment method | L/GH/F | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plant disease control | |||||
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| Sugarbeet | Bacterial suspension; proprietary formulation | L | Fenton et al. ( |
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| Onion | Patented biopolymer coating | L | O’Callaghan et al. ( | |
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| Wheat, barley, peas | Proprietary formulation | F | BioAgri AB ( |
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| Pumpkin | Bio-priming | F | Furnkranz et al. ( |
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| Oilseed rape | Pelleting, film coating, bio-priming | GH | Muller and Berg ( |
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| Maize | Bacterial suspension | GH, F | Pereira et al. ( |
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| Rice | Glycerol based formulation | L, GH | Joe et al. ( |
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| Cotton | Proprietary formulation | F | Brannen and Kenney ( |
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| Soybean | Bacterial suspension | L, GH | Correa et al. ( |
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| Soybean | Peat slurry | GH | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Bacterial consortia— | Sunflower necrosis virus disease | Sunflower | Powder and liquid | GH, F | Srinivasan and Mathivanan ( |
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| Sesame | Pelleting | GH, F | Ryu et al. ( |
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| Barley | Spore suspension | GH, F | Jensen et al. ( |
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| Unspecified soil-borne plant pathogens | Carrot, onion | Commercial drum priming | GH, F | Bennett et al. ( |
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| Soybean | Bio-priming | F | Begum et al. ( |
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| Canola, crucifer vegetables | Suspension prepared from commercially available products | GH, F | Peng et al. ( |
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| Sunflower | Conidial suspension | GH, F | Nagaruju et al. ( |
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| Wheat | Conidial suspension | F | Perelló and Dal Bello ( |
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| Wheat | Suspension of hyphae and spores | F | Al Sahli and Abdulkhair ( |
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| Cress, sugar beet | Pelleting and film coating | L | McQuilken et al. ( |
| Weed control | |||||
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| Weed of wheat crops | Downy brome | Methylcellulose suspension | GH | Mazzola et al. ( |
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| Root parasitic weed | Witch weed | Film coated | GH | Elzein et al. ( |
| Invertebrate pest control | |||||
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| Carrot, wheat, ryegrass | Patented biopolymer coating | L, GH | Wright et al. ( |
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| Ryegrass | Spores in methylcellulose | L | Rath ( |
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| Corn | Conidia applied with corn oil | F | Kabaluk and Ericsson ( | |
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| Sucking pests and pod borer complex | Pulses | Talc based formulations | F | Soundararajan and Chitra ( |
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| Stem borer | Maize | Dusting with spore powder | F | Cherry et al. ( |
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| Tomato | Methylcellulose coating | GH | Powell et al. ( | |
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| Nematode | Cotton | Spore suspension | GH | Schmidt et al. ( |
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| Plant parasitic nematodes | Corn, cotton, sorghum, soybean, sugar beet | Proprietary formulation | F | Bayer Crop Science ( |
| Improved plant performance | |||||
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| Increased rhizosphere soil moisture content | Wheat | Peat inoculant | L | Amellal et al. |
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| Alleviation of drought stress | Sunflower | Talc formulation | L | Sandhya et al. ( |
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| Improved yield of essential oil | Sweet basil | Bacterial suspension | F | Singh et al. ( |
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| Improved yield—plant biomass and essential oil | Tulsi | Bacterial suspension | GH, F | Tiwari et al. ( |
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| Improved yield under semi-arid conditions | Cowpea | Charcoal:broth mix | F | Minaxi et al. ( |
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| Increased uptake of nickel from soil | Alpine penny-cress (hyperaccumulator) | Methylcellulose suspension | L | Aboudrar et al. ( |
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| Alleviation of salinity stress | Wheat, rice | Bio-priming | L | Rawat et al. ( |
| Alleviation of disease pressure and abiotic stress—osmotic, salinity, temperature | Tomato | Conidia coated onto cellulose and encapsulated with tapioca dextran | L | Mastouri et al. ( | |
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| Improved access to soil P | Wheat, medic, lentil | Aqueous spore suspension | L, GH | Wakelin et al. ( |
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| Improved access to soil P | Wheat, canola, corn | Various proprietary formulations, seed treatment applied close to time of sowing | F | Monsanto BioAg ( |
L laboratory (including controlled growth chamber), GH glasshouse, F field trials
aAvailable as commercial products
Fig. 1Properties of methods commonly used for microbial inoculation of seed