Litcius/Paper detail

Preliminary screening of rhizobacteria for biocontrol of little seed canary grass (<i>Phalaris minor</i> Retz.) and wild oat (<i>Avena fatua</i> L.) in wheat

Abubakar Dar, Zahir Ahmad Zahir, Hafiz Naeem Asghar, Rashid Ahmad

2020Canadian Journal of Microbiology27 citationsDOI

Abstract

Conventional weed control methods often have environmental impact. The present study was conducted to screen selected accessions of Pseudomonas for both potential biocontrol of Phalaris minor and Avena fatua and potential concurrent growth promotion of wheat. The four Pseudomonas strains (B11, T19, T24, and T75) were found positive for cyanide production, siderophore production, phosphorus solubilization, oxidase activity, catalase activity, and ACC deaminase activity in vitro. These strains were phytotoxic, causing up to 73.3% mortality in the lettuce seedling bioassay. Consortia of compatible Pseudomonas strains increased A. fatua and P. minor seedling mortality up to 50.0% and 56.7%, respectively, and reduced root length up to 73.8% and 53.9%, respectively, as compared with the uninoculated control. Consortia of compatible Pseudomonas strains increased wheat shoot length, root length, fresh biomass, dry biomass, and leaf greenness up to 41.6%, 100%, 79.9%, 81.5%, and 21.1%, respectively, over the uninoculated control. Four of the 11 Pseudomonas consortia tested expressed good weed suppression and wheat growth promotion capacity and deserve further experimentation. The findings from this study may lead to the formulation of bioherbicides that will improve human and environmental health.

Topics & Concepts

Avena fatuaBiologySeedlingPhalaris minorRhizobacteriaPseudomonasAgronomyHorticultureWeedShootSiderophoreRhizosphereBacteriaGeneticsWeed Control and Herbicide ApplicationsAgronomic Practices and Intercropping SystemsNematode management and characterization studies