نتایج جستجو برای: rhizobia

تعداد نتایج: 1900  

Journal: :IOP conference series 2022

Abstract This study aims to determine the effect of combination Sulfate Reducing Bacteria, Rhizobia, and amendment matters on soil pH acid sulfate planted with soybeans, carried out at Greenhouse, Soil Biology Laboratory, Research Faculty Agriculture, Universitas Sumatera Utara, from March September 2021. used a factorial randomized block design 2 factors 3 replications. Each factor consists 4 ...

2017
Ágota Domonkos Szilárd Kovács Anikó Gombár Ernő Kiss Beatrix Horváth Gyöngyi Z Kováts Attila Farkas Mónika T Tóth Ferhan Ayaydin Károly Bóka Lili Fodor Pascal Ratet Attila Kereszt Gabriella Endre Péter Kaló

Legumes form endosymbiotic interaction with host compatible rhizobia, resulting in the development of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. Within symbiotic nodules, rhizobia are intracellularly accommodated in plant-derived membrane compartments, termed symbiosomes. In mature nodule, the massively colonized cells tolerate the existence of rhizobia without manifestation of visible defense responses, in...

2015
Ying Teng Xiaomi Wang Lina Li Zhengao Li Yongming Luo

Environmental pollutants have received considerable attention due to their serious effects on human health. There are physical, chemical, and biological means to remediate pollution; among them, bioremediation has become increasingly popular. The nitrogen-fixing rhizobia are widely distributed in the soil and root ecosystems and can increase legume growth and production by supplying nitrogen, r...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology ecology 2006
Marcel G A van der Heijden Roy Bakker Joost Verwaal Tanja R Scheublin Matthy Rutten Richard van Logtestijn Christian Staehelin

Symbiotic interactions are thought to play a key role in ecosystems. Empirical evidence for the impact of symbiotic bacteria on plant communities is, however, extremely scarce because of experimental constraints. Here, in three complementary experiments, we show that nitrogen-fixing rhizobia bacteria act as a determinant of plant community structure and diversity. Grassland microcosms inoculate...

2017
Yuichi Saeki Sokichi Shiro

Soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) establishes a symbiotic relationship by infection with soybeannodulating bacteria and subsequent root nodule formation. Soybean acquires atmospheric nitrogen as ammonia through the symbiotic nitrogen fixation by soybean-nodulating rhizobia in the root nodules. The inoculation of soybean with bradyrhizobia that has high ability of nitrogen fixation is considered ...

2017
Malinda S. Thilakarathna Nicholas Moroz Manish N. Raizada

Legumes are protein sources for billions of humans and livestock. These traits are enabled by symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF), whereby root nodule-inhabiting rhizobia bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen (N) into usable N. Unfortunately, SNF rates in legume crops suffer from undiagnosed incompatible/suboptimal interactions between crop varieties and rhizobia strains. There are opportunities ...

2015
Matthew S. Nelson Michael J. Sadowsky

The formation of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing nodules on the roots and/or stem of leguminous plants involves a complex signal exchange between both partners. Since many microorganisms are present in the soil, legumes and rhizobia must recognize and initiate communication with each other to establish symbioses. This results in the formation of nodules. Rhizobia within nodules exchange fixed nitroge...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1992
N C Dupuy B L Dreyfus

Soil cores were drilled under the leguminous tree Acacia albida growing in two different ecoclimatic zones of West Africa: the Sahelian area (100 to 500 mm of annual rainfall) and the Sudano-Guinean area (1,000 to 1,500 mm of annual rainfall). Soil samples were collected at different depths from the surface down to the water table level and analyzed for the presence of rhizobia able to nodulate...

Journal: :The American naturalist 2000
R Ford Denison

The legume-rhizobium symbiosis is an ideal model for studying the factors that limit the evolution of microbial mutualists into parasites. Legumes are unable to consistently recognize parasitic rhizobia that, once established inside plant cells, use plant resources for their own reproduction rather than for N2 fixation. Evolution of parasitism in rhizobia, driven partly by competition among mul...

2016
Kun Yuan Hiroki Miwa Maki Iizuka Tadashi Yokoyama Yoshiharu Fujii Shin Okazaki

Hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth) is a leguminous crop widely used as green manure and a cover crop in Japan. It exhibits strong weed-suppressing activity, high resistance to insect pests, and the ability to fix nitrogen through symbiotic interactions with soil bacteria known as rhizobia. Few studies have investigated the rhizobia that form nodules on hairy vetch in Japan, and the biological res...

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