Litcius/Paper detail

Yield and Nutraceutical Value of Lettuce and Basil Improved by a Microbial Inoculum in Greenhouse Experiments

Elia Pagliarini, Francesca Gaggìa, Maurizio Quartieri, Moreno Toselli, Diana Di Gioia

2023Plants11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Members of Bacillus spp. have been widely used to enrich the soil/root interface to provide plant growth promoting activities. A new isolate, namely to Bacillus sp. VWC18, has been tested under greenhouse conditions in lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) pots at different concentrations (103, 105, 107, and 109 CFU·mL−1) and application time (single inoculum at transplant and multiple inoculum every ten days) to evaluate the best application dose and frequency. Analysis of foliar yield, main nutrients, and minerals evidenced a significant response for all applications. The lowest (103 CFU·mL−1) and the highest doses (109 CFU·mL−1), applied every ten days until harvest, had the greatest efficacy; the nutrient yield (N, K, P, Na, Ca, Fe, Mg, Mn, Cu, and B) increased more than twice. A new randomized block design with three replicates was then performed in lettuce and basil (Ocinum basilicum L.), with the two best performing concentrations applied every ten days. In addition to previous analysis, root weight, chlorophyll, and carotenoids were also examined. Both experiments confirmed the previous results: inoculation of the substrate with Bacillus sp. VWC18 promoted plant growth, chlorophyll, and mineral uptake in both crop species. Root weight duplicated or triplicated compared to control plants, and chlorophyll concentration reached even higher values. Both parameters had a dose-dependent increase.

Topics & Concepts

LactucaRandomized block designChlorophyllHorticultureNutrientCropInoculationCarotenoidBiologyDry weightBasilicumYield (engineering)BotanyChemistryOcimumAgronomyMetallurgyMaterials scienceEcologyPlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityPlant tissue culture and regenerationComposting and Vermicomposting Techniques