1. Improved Yield of Micropropagated Sugarcane Following Inoculation by Endophytic Burkholderia vietnamiensis.
- Author
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Govindarajan, Munusamy, Balandreau, Jacques, Muthukumarasamy, Ramachandran, Revathi, Gopalakrishnan, and Lakshminarasimhan, Cunthipuram
- Subjects
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NITROGEN-fixing plants , *SUGARCANE , *NITROGEN in agriculture , *SOIL fertility , *INOCULATION of crops , *BIOFERTILIZERS , *ENDOPHYTES - Abstract
During a survey of nitrogen-fixing Burkholderia associated with sugarcane in Tamil Nadu, some endophytes were isolated on PCAT medium. Isolation was based on the use of the selective PCAT medium. Four isolates were studied, all belonging to the genus Burkholderia. One of them, MG43 was consistently more active in reducing acetylene and was identified as Burkholderia vietnamiensis. This isolate was used to inoculate micro-propagated sugarcane plantlets in a comparison with two other diazoptrophs, viz. Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus T and Herbaspirillum seropedicae T. Inoculated plants and uninoculated controls were used in a pot experiment followed by two field experiments under different rates of nitrogen fertilisers. MG43 and G. diazotrophicus performed best in sugarcane, their natural host. Biomass increase due to MG43 inoculation reached 20% in the field. Inoculated plants were heavily colonised by the inoculated bacterium (up to 115,000 CFU gā1 root fresh weight). Inoculation by a combinaison of the three strains performed less well than inoculation by a single MG43 suspension. Ecological implications are discussed, as well as the potential of these bacteria to provide a feasible alternative to higher N fertilisers rates in a low input and long term sustainable rural economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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