نتایج جستجو برای: rhizobial inoculant

تعداد نتایج: 1901  

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2007
E Toby Kiers Mark G Hutton R Ford Denison

Enforcement mechanisms are thought to be important in maintaining mutualistic cooperation between species. A clear example of an enforcement mechanism is how legumes impose sanctions on rhizobial symbionts that fail to provide sufficient fixed N2. However, with domestication and breeding in high-soil-N environments, humans may have altered these natural legume defences and reduced the agricultu...

Journal: :Luminescence : the journal of biological and chemical luminescence 2003
Chantal J Beauchamp Joseph W Kloepper

The ability of rhizobacteria to compete with other microorganisms for root colonization may be critical for its establishment on a root. Over a 6 day period, visualization of the spatial and temporal rhizosphere distribution of a bioluminescent-marked rhizobacterium, Pseudomonas putida, strain GR7.4lux, was examined on soybean grown in non-sterile soil conditions. Luminometry technologies showe...

2004
TERRY J. GENTRY IAN L. PEPPER

Bioaugmentation is commonly employed as a remediation technology. However, numerous studies indicate that introduced microorganisms often do not survive in the environment and thus do not increase contaminant remediation. This review details several new approaches that may increase the persistence and activity of exogenous microorganisms and/or genes following introduction into the environment....

Journal: :Carbohydrate polymers 2014
Tereza Cristina Luque Castellane Manoel Victor Franco Lemos Eliana Gertrudes de Macedo Lemos

Rhizobium tropici, a member of the Rhizobiaceae family, has the ability to synthesize and secrete extracellular polysaccharides (EPS). Rhizobial EPS have attracted much attention from the scientific and industrial communities. Rhizobial isolates and R. tropici mutants that produced higher levels of EPS than the wild-type strain SEMIA4080 were used in the present study. The results suggested a h...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1982
P Somasegaran J Halliday

Experiments were undertaken to test whether peat-based legume seed inoculants, which are prepared with liquid cultures that have been deliberately diluted, can attain and sustain acceptable numbers of viable rhizobia. Liquid cultures of Rhizobium japonicum and Rhizobium phaseoli were diluted to give 10, 10, or 10 cells per ml, using either deionized water, quarter-strength yeast-mannitol broth,...

2017
Kimberly J La Pierre Ellen L Simms Mohsin Tariq Marriam Zafar Stephanie S Porter

Mutualistic interactions can strongly influence species invasions, as the inability to form successful mutualisms in an exotic range could hamper a host's invasion success. This barrier to invasion may be overcome if an invader either forms novel mutualistic associations or finds and associates with familiar mutualists in the exotic range. Here, we ask (1) does the community of rhizobial mutual...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2016
Tatiana Vernié Sylvie Camut Céline Camps Céline Rembliere Fernanda de Carvalho-Niebel Malick Mbengue Ton Timmers Virginie Gasciolli Richard Thompson Christine le Signor Benoit Lefebvre Julie Cullimore Christine Hervé

PUB1, an E3 ubiquitin ligase, which interacts with and is phosphorylated by the LYK3 symbiotic receptor kinase, negatively regulates rhizobial infection and nodulation during the nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbiosis in Medicago truncatula In this study, we show that PUB1 also interacts with and is phosphorylated by DOES NOT MAKE INFECTIONS 2, the key symbiotic receptor kinase of the common sym...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1998
Lafay Burdon

The structure of rhizobial communities nodulating native shrubby legumes in open eucalypt forest of southeastern Australia was investigated by a molecular approach. Twenty-one genomic species were characterized by small-subunit ribosomal DNA PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism and phylogenetic analyses, among 745 rhizobial strains isolated from nodules sampled on 32 different legume ho...

2017
Mitchell Andrews Morag E. Andrews

Most species in the Leguminosae (legume family) can fix atmospheric nitrogen (N₂) via symbiotic bacteria (rhizobia) in root nodules. Here, the literature on legume-rhizobia symbioses in field soils was reviewed and genotypically characterised rhizobia related to the taxonomy of the legumes from which they were isolated. The Leguminosae was divided into three sub-families, the Caesalpinioideae, ...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2011
Ryoko Oono Carolyn G Anderson R Ford Denison

The legume-rhizobia symbiosis is a classical mutualism where fixed carbon and nitrogen are exchanged between the species. Nonetheless, the plant carbon that fuels nitrogen (N(2)) fixation could be diverted to rhizobial reproduction by 'cheaters'--rhizobial strains that fix less N(2) but potentially gain the benefit of fixation by other rhizobia. Host sanctions can decrease the relative fitness ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید