Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil

Post tin mining soil is generally marginal with low pH, has poor nutrient content, and is thus unfavorable for plant growth, particularly for Sorghum bicolor, which is a nutrient-demanding plant. Indigenous bacteria are usually used in bioaugmentation to ameliorate environmental degradation due to t...

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Main Authors: Widawati, Sri, Suliasih
Format: Article PeerReviewed
Language:English
English
Published: Universitas Indonesia 2019
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spelling id-langga.826872019-05-24T02:10:57Z http://repository.unair.ac.id/82687/ Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil Widawati, Sri Suliasih R Medicine Post tin mining soil is generally marginal with low pH, has poor nutrient content, and is thus unfavorable for plant growth, particularly for Sorghum bicolor, which is a nutrient-demanding plant. Indigenous bacteria are usually used in bioaugmentation to ameliorate environmental degradation due to their ability to adapt well. This research aimed to isolate indigenous nitrogen-fixing bacteria and evaluate its potential for promoting the growth of S. bicolor on post tin mining soil. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria were isolated from post tin mining soil by using specific media and identified by Bergey’s manual. Twenty five isolates were obtained, and eight of them (Azospirillum sp., Azospirillum lipoferum, Azotobacter chroococcum, A. paspalii, and Rhizobium sp.) were identified as nitrogen-fixing bacteria. A greenhouse experiment was conducted using factorial completely randomized design with three replications. The first factors were fertilizers, i.e., NPK; A. lipoferum CBT4 + NPK; A. lipoferum CBT4; and without fertilizer (control). The second factors were soil types, i.e., A (fertile soil from Cibinong), B (soil from Bangka Botanical Garden), C (soil from post tin mines two years after mining), and D (soil from active tin mining). Result showed that Azospirillum lipoferum CBT4 isolated from C (soil from post tin mines two years after mining) exhibited the highest IAA, Ca-P solubilizing ability,and PME-ase activity. This species survived up to a population of 107 CFU/gram soil in the three types of post tin mining soils and could be a potential plant-growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) species for effectively improving the growth of S. bicolor plant on post tin-mining soil. Universitas Indonesia 2019 Article PeerReviewed text en http://repository.unair.ac.id/82687/1/abstrak%20sri%20widati.pdf text en http://repository.unair.ac.id/82687/2/sri%20widati.pdf Widawati, Sri and Suliasih (2019) Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil. Makara Journal of Science, 23 (1). pp. 28-38. ISSN 2356-0851 http://journal.ui.ac.id/index.php/science/index 10.7454/mss.v23i1.10801
institution Universitas Airlangga
building Universitas Airlangga Library
country Indonesia
collection UNAIR Repository
language English
English
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Widawati, Sri
Suliasih
Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil
description Post tin mining soil is generally marginal with low pH, has poor nutrient content, and is thus unfavorable for plant growth, particularly for Sorghum bicolor, which is a nutrient-demanding plant. Indigenous bacteria are usually used in bioaugmentation to ameliorate environmental degradation due to their ability to adapt well. This research aimed to isolate indigenous nitrogen-fixing bacteria and evaluate its potential for promoting the growth of S. bicolor on post tin mining soil. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria were isolated from post tin mining soil by using specific media and identified by Bergey’s manual. Twenty five isolates were obtained, and eight of them (Azospirillum sp., Azospirillum lipoferum, Azotobacter chroococcum, A. paspalii, and Rhizobium sp.) were identified as nitrogen-fixing bacteria. A greenhouse experiment was conducted using factorial completely randomized design with three replications. The first factors were fertilizers, i.e., NPK; A. lipoferum CBT4 + NPK; A. lipoferum CBT4; and without fertilizer (control). The second factors were soil types, i.e., A (fertile soil from Cibinong), B (soil from Bangka Botanical Garden), C (soil from post tin mines two years after mining), and D (soil from active tin mining). Result showed that Azospirillum lipoferum CBT4 isolated from C (soil from post tin mines two years after mining) exhibited the highest IAA, Ca-P solubilizing ability,and PME-ase activity. This species survived up to a population of 107 CFU/gram soil in the three types of post tin mining soils and could be a potential plant-growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) species for effectively improving the growth of S. bicolor plant on post tin-mining soil.
format Article
PeerReviewed
author Widawati, Sri
Suliasih
author_facet Widawati, Sri
Suliasih
author_sort Widawati, Sri
title Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil
title_short Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil
title_full Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil
title_fullStr Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil
title_full_unstemmed Role of Indigenous Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria in Promoting Plant Growth on Post Tin Mining Soil
title_sort role of indigenous nitrogen-fixing bacteria in promoting plant growth on post tin mining soil
publisher Universitas Indonesia
publishDate 2019
url http://repository.unair.ac.id/82687/1/abstrak%20sri%20widati.pdf
http://repository.unair.ac.id/82687/2/sri%20widati.pdf
http://repository.unair.ac.id/82687/
http://journal.ui.ac.id/index.php/science/index
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