نتایج جستجو برای: rhizobial inoculant

تعداد نتایج: 1901  

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1991
S Cunningham W D Kollmeyer G Stacey

Previous research has shown that a significant limitation to the agricultural use of improved rhizobial inoculant strains is competition from the indigenous soil population. In this work, we sought to test whether chemical inhibitors of flavonoid-induced nod gene expression in Bradyrhizobium japonicum could be identified and utilized to affect interstrain competition for nodulation of soybeans....

2013
Wayne Reeve Elizabeth Drew Ross Ballard Vanessa Melino Rui Tian Sofie De Meyer Lambert Brau Mohamed Ninawi Hajnalka Daligault Karen Davenport Tracy Erkkila Lynne Goodwin Wei Gu Christine Munk Hazuki Teshima Yan Xu Patrick Chain Nikos Kyrpides

Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii SRDI943 (strain syn. V2-2) is an aerobic, motile, Gram-negative, non-spore-forming rod that was isolated from a root nodule of Trifolium michelianum Savi cv. Paradana that had been grown in soil collected from a mixed pasture in Victoria, Australia. This isolate was found to have a broad clover host range but was sub-optimal for nitrogen fixation with T. sub...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1986
T Ozawa M Yamaguchi

Rhizobial cells attached or unattached to soil particles were estimated. Nonsterile soils into which antibiotic-resistant mutants of Bradyrhizobium japonicum had been introduced were fractionated by a centrifugation technique into two fractions: A, which contained mainly rhizobial cells attached to soil particles, and F, which contained mainly rhizobial cells unattached to them. Rhizobial count...

2006
Eeva Saarisalo Taina Jalava Seija Jaakkola

The efficiency of a novel strain of lactic acid bacteria inoculant (Lactobacillus plantarum VTT E-78076, E76) on the fermentation quality of wilted silage was studied. Furthermore, the possibility to improve aerobic stability of silages by combining an inoculant and chemical preservatives was investigated. Two experiments were conducted with wilted timothy-meadow fescue herbage (dry matter 429 ...

2016
Hong Shen Xinhua He Yiqing Liu Yi Chen Jianming Tang Tao Guo

Limited information is available if plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB) can promote the growth of fruit crops through improvements in soil fertility. This study aimed to evaluate the capacity of PGPB, identified by phenotypic and 16S rRNA sequencing from a vegetable purple soil in Chongqing, China, to increase soil nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) availability and growth of ki...

Journal: :The Science of the total environment 2014
Mauricio Schoebitz Carmen Mengual Antonio Roldán

The reestablishment of autochthonous shrubs species is an essential strategy for recovering degraded soils under semiarid Mediterranean areas. A field experiment was carried out to assess the effectiveness of an immobilized microbial inoculant (Azospirillum brasilense and Pantoea dispersa) and the addition of organic olive residue (alperujo), for plant growth promotion of Cistus albidus L. and ...

2017
B. C. Pedreira P. L. Barbosa A. Ferreira

The objective of this study is to verify the population density and the dynamics of tillering in the Marandu palisade grass sward subjected to nitrogen (N) fertilization strategies, characterized by the N supply via urea or bacterial inoculant (Azospirillum brasilense). The treatments comprised of four nitrogen fertilization strategies: (A) Without fertilization, (B) 80 kg N/ha, (C) inoculant (...

Journal: :Sustainability 2023

The use of bacterial inoculants is an attractive alternative that could reduce the consumption chemical fertilizers in crops. In production system quality coffee seedlings, it essential to achieve adequate balance nutrients allows for healthy plants are resistant subsequent handling. objective this work was evaluate effect Rhizobium sp. inoculation on growth, nutrition and seedlings cultivated ...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2006
Kemanthi G Nandasena Graham W O'hara Ravi P Tiwari John G Howieson

Diverse rhizobia able to nodulate Biserrula pelecinus evolved following in situ transfer of nodA and nifH from an inoculant to soil bacteria. Transfer of these chromosomal genes and the presence of an identical integrase gene adjacent to a Phe tRNA gene in both the inoculant and recipients indicate that there was lateral transfer of a symbiosis island.

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