Litcius/Paper detail

Characterization of rhizobia isolated from leguminous plants and their impact on the growth of ICCV 2 variety of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)

Mohammad Imran Mir, B. Kiran Kumar, Subramaniam Gopalakrishnan, Vadlamudi Srinivas, Bee Hameeda

2021Heliyon44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

gene by PCR, and also enhanced nodule formation in chickpea under greenhouse conditions, which explains their nitrogen fixing ability. Scanning electron microscopy studies of chickpea roots showed colonization by all the six bacterial strains in solo and by consortium (IHRG + IHGN-3). Under greenhouse conditions, chickpea plants inoculated with different strains showed improvement in plant height, number of branches, total chlorophyll, nodule number, nodule weight, shoot weight, root weight, root volume and root surface area at 30 and 45 days after sowing (DAS) over the uninoculated control plants. It was also observed at the crop maturity stage all the bacterial strains inoculated separately enhanced pod number, seed number and total NPK compared to uninoculated control plants. This study suggests that bacteria associated with root and stem nodules can be a promising resource to enhance nodulation, PGP and crop yields in chickpea.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyRhizobiaRhizobiumHorticultureShootSiderophoreMicrobial inoculantRoot noduleRhizobacteriaAmylaseInoculationNitrogen fixationBotanyBacteriaRhizosphereGeneticsEnzymeBiochemistryLegume Nitrogen Fixing SymbiosisNematode management and characterization studiesSoybean genetics and cultivation