Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas

Symbiotic efficiency of 50 native bradyrhizobium isolates from northern Thailand with 12 soybean cultivars of Asian, Nigerian, or US origin was evaluated under laboratory conditions. The isolates were obtained from fields in upland rainfed areas of northern Thailand where soybeans had been tradition...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shutsrirung A., Pengnoo A., Bhromsiri A., Senoo K., Tajima S., Hisamatsu M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-0036688145&partnerID=40&md5=064ba9a68f655fbd67f463a92c6505fb
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/348
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Chiang Mai University
Language: English
id th-cmuir.6653943832-348
record_format dspace
spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-3482014-08-29T07:31:38Z Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas Shutsrirung A. Pengnoo A. Bhromsiri A. Senoo K. Tajima S. Hisamatsu M. Symbiotic efficiency of 50 native bradyrhizobium isolates from northern Thailand with 12 soybean cultivars of Asian, Nigerian, or US origin was evaluated under laboratory conditions. The isolates were obtained from fields in upland rainfed areas of northern Thailand where soybeans had been traditionally cultivated. Twelve soybean cultivars of Asian or US origin were grown in a nitrogen-free nutrient solution with inoculation of each of the isolates. The symbiotic efficiency of the isolates was evaluated based on the total amount of nitrogen accumulation by host plants in comparison with uninoculated control plants or plants inoculated with Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110. Almost all the isolates were able to nodulate all the soybean cultivars. Compared with control soybean cultivars grown in a nitrogen-free nutrient solution (- N - R), forty-four isolates induced a high nitrogen-fixing ability (E category) in association with at least one soybean cultivar, Coc Chumhat. More than half of the tested isolates induced effective nitrogen fixation in this category in association with almost all the tested soybean cultivars (except for Peking (46%) and Bossier (20%)). Unique character of the tested isolates was that most of them were effective in association with a relatively wide range of soybean cultivars, i.e. "promiscuous." This character was not observed in the native isolates from irrigated areas in our previous study. Three soybean cultivars, Coc Chumhat, CMU001, and IITA medium, showed a high symbiotic performance (E + e category of the isolates) with most of the tested isolates (90, 84, and 78%, respectively), suggesting their "promiscuous" character. From the results of our three experiments (one field and two laboratory experiments), it was concluded that: 1) the native rhizobial populations in the traditional soybean-growing area of northern Thailand showed a high level of infectiveness and effectiveness in association with a wide range of soybean genotypes, 2) when a proper soybean cultivar is used, adequate amount of nitrogen fixation for soybean would be expected from these native rhizobial populations, and 3) various symbiotic characteristics of the native rhizobial populations obtained from field and laboratory experiments provided useful background information for the justification of soybean cultivation and the need for inoculation in northern Thailand. 2014-08-29T07:31:38Z 2014-08-29T07:31:38Z 2002 Article 00380768 SSPNA http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-0036688145&partnerID=40&md5=064ba9a68f655fbd67f463a92c6505fb http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/348 English
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
language English
description Symbiotic efficiency of 50 native bradyrhizobium isolates from northern Thailand with 12 soybean cultivars of Asian, Nigerian, or US origin was evaluated under laboratory conditions. The isolates were obtained from fields in upland rainfed areas of northern Thailand where soybeans had been traditionally cultivated. Twelve soybean cultivars of Asian or US origin were grown in a nitrogen-free nutrient solution with inoculation of each of the isolates. The symbiotic efficiency of the isolates was evaluated based on the total amount of nitrogen accumulation by host plants in comparison with uninoculated control plants or plants inoculated with Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110. Almost all the isolates were able to nodulate all the soybean cultivars. Compared with control soybean cultivars grown in a nitrogen-free nutrient solution (- N - R), forty-four isolates induced a high nitrogen-fixing ability (E category) in association with at least one soybean cultivar, Coc Chumhat. More than half of the tested isolates induced effective nitrogen fixation in this category in association with almost all the tested soybean cultivars (except for Peking (46%) and Bossier (20%)). Unique character of the tested isolates was that most of them were effective in association with a relatively wide range of soybean cultivars, i.e. "promiscuous." This character was not observed in the native isolates from irrigated areas in our previous study. Three soybean cultivars, Coc Chumhat, CMU001, and IITA medium, showed a high symbiotic performance (E + e category of the isolates) with most of the tested isolates (90, 84, and 78%, respectively), suggesting their "promiscuous" character. From the results of our three experiments (one field and two laboratory experiments), it was concluded that: 1) the native rhizobial populations in the traditional soybean-growing area of northern Thailand showed a high level of infectiveness and effectiveness in association with a wide range of soybean genotypes, 2) when a proper soybean cultivar is used, adequate amount of nitrogen fixation for soybean would be expected from these native rhizobial populations, and 3) various symbiotic characteristics of the native rhizobial populations obtained from field and laboratory experiments provided useful background information for the justification of soybean cultivation and the need for inoculation in northern Thailand.
format Article
author Shutsrirung A.
Pengnoo A.
Bhromsiri A.
Senoo K.
Tajima S.
Hisamatsu M.
spellingShingle Shutsrirung A.
Pengnoo A.
Bhromsiri A.
Senoo K.
Tajima S.
Hisamatsu M.
Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas
author_facet Shutsrirung A.
Pengnoo A.
Bhromsiri A.
Senoo K.
Tajima S.
Hisamatsu M.
author_sort Shutsrirung A.
title Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas
title_short Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas
title_full Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas
title_fullStr Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas
title_full_unstemmed Symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern Thailand with different soybean cultivars- III. Laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas
title_sort symbiotic efficiency and compatibility of native rhizobia in northern thailand with different soybean cultivars- iii. laboratory experiment using native isolates from upland rainfed soybean-growing areas
publishDate 2014
url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-0036688145&partnerID=40&md5=064ba9a68f655fbd67f463a92c6505fb
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/348
_version_ 1681419466279223296