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Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola

Meloidogyne graminicola has a well-established negative impact on rice yield in transplanted and direct-seeded rice, resulting in yield losses of up to 20 to 90 percent. Studies were undertaken to isolate potential native strains of bio-control agents to manage the devastating Rice Root Knot Nematod...

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Autores principales: Jena, Rupak, Choudhury, Bhupendranath, Das, Debanand, Bhagawati, Bhabesh, Borah, Pradip Kumar, Prabhukartikeyan, Seenichamy Rathinam, Singh, Swoyam, Mahapatra, Manaswini, Lal, Milan Kumar, Tiwari, Rahul Kumar, Kumar, Ravinder
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10389073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37529212
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15779
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author Jena, Rupak
Choudhury, Bhupendranath
Das, Debanand
Bhagawati, Bhabesh
Borah, Pradip Kumar
Prabhukartikeyan, Seenichamy Rathinam
Singh, Swoyam
Mahapatra, Manaswini
Lal, Milan Kumar
Tiwari, Rahul Kumar
Kumar, Ravinder
author_facet Jena, Rupak
Choudhury, Bhupendranath
Das, Debanand
Bhagawati, Bhabesh
Borah, Pradip Kumar
Prabhukartikeyan, Seenichamy Rathinam
Singh, Swoyam
Mahapatra, Manaswini
Lal, Milan Kumar
Tiwari, Rahul Kumar
Kumar, Ravinder
author_sort Jena, Rupak
collection PubMed
description Meloidogyne graminicola has a well-established negative impact on rice yield in transplanted and direct-seeded rice, resulting in yield losses of up to 20 to 90 percent. Studies were undertaken to isolate potential native strains of bio-control agents to manage the devastating Rice Root Knot Nematode (M. graminicola). Eighteen bacterial strains and eleven fungal strains were isolated from the rhizosphere of crops like rice, okra, ash gourd, chili, beans and cucumber, enveloping diverse soil types from the Upper Brahmaputra Valley region of Assam. Six bacterial strains were gram-positive according to morphological results, while twelve others stained negatively. Fifteen bacteria were rod-shaped, two were coccus and one was diplococcus, and all the bacterial isolates showed signs of movement. All the bacterial strains exhibited positivity for gelatin hydrolysis and catalase test. Seven bacteria showed positive, while eleven showed negative reactions to possess the ability to deduce carbon and energy from citrate. The study of the in vitro efficacy of the twenty-nine bacterial and fungal isolates tested against second-stage juveniles (J(2)) of Meloidogyne graminicola revealed that all the bacterial and fungal isolates potentially inhibited the test organism and caused significant mortality over sterile water treatment. The promising bacterial and fungal isolates that exhibited mortality above 50% were identified as BSH8, BTS4, BTS5, BJA15, FJB 11 and FSH5. The strain BSH8 exhibited the best result of mortality, with 80.79% mortality against J(2) of M. graminicola. The strain BTS4 and BTS5 expressed mortality of 71.29% and 68.75% under in-vitro conditions and were significant. The effective and promising bioagents were identified using the 16 S rRNA sequencing as Bacillis subtilis (BSH8), Bacillus velezensis (BTS4), Alcaligenes faecalis (BTS5), Rhizobium pusense (BJA15), Talaromyces allahabadensis (FSH5) and Trichoderma asperellum (FJB11). These results indicated the microorganism’s potential against M. graminicola and its potential for successful biological implementation. Further, the native strains could be tested against various nematode pests of rice in field conditions. Its compatibility with various pesticides and the implication of the potential strains in integrated pest management can be assessed.
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spelling pubmed-103890732023-08-01 Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola Jena, Rupak Choudhury, Bhupendranath Das, Debanand Bhagawati, Bhabesh Borah, Pradip Kumar Prabhukartikeyan, Seenichamy Rathinam Singh, Swoyam Mahapatra, Manaswini Lal, Milan Kumar Tiwari, Rahul Kumar Kumar, Ravinder PeerJ Agricultural Science Meloidogyne graminicola has a well-established negative impact on rice yield in transplanted and direct-seeded rice, resulting in yield losses of up to 20 to 90 percent. Studies were undertaken to isolate potential native strains of bio-control agents to manage the devastating Rice Root Knot Nematode (M. graminicola). Eighteen bacterial strains and eleven fungal strains were isolated from the rhizosphere of crops like rice, okra, ash gourd, chili, beans and cucumber, enveloping diverse soil types from the Upper Brahmaputra Valley region of Assam. Six bacterial strains were gram-positive according to morphological results, while twelve others stained negatively. Fifteen bacteria were rod-shaped, two were coccus and one was diplococcus, and all the bacterial isolates showed signs of movement. All the bacterial strains exhibited positivity for gelatin hydrolysis and catalase test. Seven bacteria showed positive, while eleven showed negative reactions to possess the ability to deduce carbon and energy from citrate. The study of the in vitro efficacy of the twenty-nine bacterial and fungal isolates tested against second-stage juveniles (J(2)) of Meloidogyne graminicola revealed that all the bacterial and fungal isolates potentially inhibited the test organism and caused significant mortality over sterile water treatment. The promising bacterial and fungal isolates that exhibited mortality above 50% were identified as BSH8, BTS4, BTS5, BJA15, FJB 11 and FSH5. The strain BSH8 exhibited the best result of mortality, with 80.79% mortality against J(2) of M. graminicola. The strain BTS4 and BTS5 expressed mortality of 71.29% and 68.75% under in-vitro conditions and were significant. The effective and promising bioagents were identified using the 16 S rRNA sequencing as Bacillis subtilis (BSH8), Bacillus velezensis (BTS4), Alcaligenes faecalis (BTS5), Rhizobium pusense (BJA15), Talaromyces allahabadensis (FSH5) and Trichoderma asperellum (FJB11). These results indicated the microorganism’s potential against M. graminicola and its potential for successful biological implementation. Further, the native strains could be tested against various nematode pests of rice in field conditions. Its compatibility with various pesticides and the implication of the potential strains in integrated pest management can be assessed. PeerJ Inc. 2023-07-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10389073/ /pubmed/37529212 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15779 Text en © 2023 Jena et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Agricultural Science
Jena, Rupak
Choudhury, Bhupendranath
Das, Debanand
Bhagawati, Bhabesh
Borah, Pradip Kumar
Prabhukartikeyan, Seenichamy Rathinam
Singh, Swoyam
Mahapatra, Manaswini
Lal, Milan Kumar
Tiwari, Rahul Kumar
Kumar, Ravinder
Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola
title Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola
title_full Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola
title_fullStr Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola
title_short Diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in Upper Region of Assam and its efficacy against Meloidogyne graminicola
title_sort diversity of bioprotective microbial organisms in upper region of assam and its efficacy against meloidogyne graminicola
topic Agricultural Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10389073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37529212
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15779
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