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Isolation and screening of stress tolerant and plant growth promoting root nodulating rhizobial bacteria from some wild legumes of Nagaland, India.
- Source :
-
South African Journal of Botany . May2024, Vol. 168, p260-269. 10p. - Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Wild legumes are widely distributed and better adapted to extreme agro-climatic conditions because of their soil microbiota. In the present study, Root Nodulating Bacteria (RNB) were isolated from wild legumes and analysed for their abiotic stress tolerant and Plant Growth Promoting Traits (PGPT). Rhizobial strains were identified based on their 16S rRNA sequences. A total of 14 rhizobial species were characterized based, of which six were Rhizobium (AIS3, AIS9, AIR14, LUMCR3, LUMVRW4, LUMVRW8), four belongs to Burkholderia (AIS12, MOLKCS15, CHMP9, CHMP10) and one each of genera Cupriavidus (LUMMD12) , Herbaspirillum (LUMVRW4) , Paraburkholderia (CHMP1) and Ralstonia (LUMDes9). Stress tolerance analysis found most of the strains are to be tolerant to alkaline pH (9–11) where highest tolerance exhibited by Rhizobium sp. (strain AIS9) and Burkholderia territorii (strain MOKCS15). Seven Rhizobial strains were able to thrive at lower temperature stress (10 and 20 °C); while, strains AIS9, CHMP1 and LUMMD21 were able to grow at higher temperature (40 and 50 °C). Most of the isolate could tolerate salinity stress up to 1.5 %; but, only isolates AIS9, AIS12 and LUMMD12 could tolerate 2 and 2.5 % salt concentrations. The PGPT analyses found LUMCR3 having the highest IAA production potentiality (102.5 µg/ml); while, isolate MOKCS15 exhibited highest phosphate solubilizing activity (4.1 Phosphate Solubilization Index). The RNB isolates in the present study exhibited both stress tolerance and PGP traits indicating their potential use as biofertilizer under extreme agronomic conditions to improve productivity. [Display omitted] • A total 14 rhizobial RNB isolated from the root nodules of 8 wild legumes from Nagaland. • Rhizobial strains were found to have abiotic stress (pH, salt, temperature) tolerance abilities. • Rhizobial isolates also showed IAA production and PSB traits. • First report nodulating ability of Burkholderia sp. isolated from Aeschynomene americana nodules. • First report on RNB from Vigna nepalensis (Herbaspirillum sp. and Rhizobium sp). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 02546299
- Volume :
- 168
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- South African Journal of Botany
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 176865678
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sajb.2024.03.021