| Literature DB >> 36074250 |
Mayan Blanc Amaral1, Tamiris Dos Santos Lopes2, Caroline Bueno Feder2, Thiago Gonçalves Ribeiro2, Rafael Sanches Pacheco3, Thiago Neves Teixeira4, Edevaldo de Castro Monteiro2, Israel Oliveira Ramalho2, Robert de O Macedo2, Robert M Boddey3, Jerri Edson Zilli3, Bruno J R Alves3.
Abstract
The introduction of a forage legume into a tropical pasture should decrease the need for N fertilizer, provided biological N2 fixation (BNF) contributes enough to compensate for exported N. Macrotyloma axillare (perennial horsegram) is a suitable legume for composing mixed pastures, and our hypothesis is that the isolation of indigenous rhizobia from roots and rhizosphere is the way of achieving an efficient inoculant to maximize BNF to the legume. Nodules and rhizosphere soil taken from M. axillare grown in a mixed pasture with palisade grass were sampled and used in a trap host assay using Leonard jars containing a mixture of vermiculite and sand. A total of ten bacteria were initially isolated using this technique. The isolates were then used in two experiments to evaluate the inoculation responses on the perennial horsegram in greenhouse conditions to which nodulation, plant growth, and shoot N accumulation were measured. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA and recA placed all strains within genus Bradyrhizobium, some of them not previously described. The best strain provided more than 120 nodules and more than 65 mg of nodules per plant. Strain BR14182 was considered the most promising given the high dry matter and N accumulation in plant shoots. This study provides the first analysis of Bradyrhizobium diversity nodulating M. axillare in Brazil and provided evidence of the role of inoculation in incrementing the plant-rhizobium symbiosis in a forage legume.Entities:
Keywords: Macrotyloma axillare; Mixed pastures; Nodulation; Rhizobia inoculant
Year: 2022 PMID: 36074250 DOI: 10.1007/s42770-022-00821-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Microbiol ISSN: 1517-8382 Impact factor: 2.214