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Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants

Plant growth-promoting endophytic microorganisms in agriculture have been expanding in Brazil and are an excellent strategy to face the challenges of current agriculture, such as reducing production costs with fewer environmental impacts, without detriment to productivity. However, little is known a...

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Autores principales: Bueno, Clara Barros, dos Santos, Roberta Mendes, de Souza Buzo, Fernando, de Andrade da Silva, Maura Santos Reis, Rigobelo, Everlon Cid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9298503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35875531
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.901157
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author Bueno, Clara Barros
dos Santos, Roberta Mendes
de Souza Buzo, Fernando
de Andrade da Silva, Maura Santos Reis
Rigobelo, Everlon Cid
author_facet Bueno, Clara Barros
dos Santos, Roberta Mendes
de Souza Buzo, Fernando
de Andrade da Silva, Maura Santos Reis
Rigobelo, Everlon Cid
author_sort Bueno, Clara Barros
collection PubMed
description Plant growth-promoting endophytic microorganisms in agriculture have been expanding in Brazil and are an excellent strategy to face the challenges of current agriculture, such as reducing production costs with fewer environmental impacts, without detriment to productivity. However, little is known about the factors that can affect the colonization of endophytic such as inoculant concentration and mineral fertilization. The present study aimed to evaluate the influence of these factors on soybean and maize crops and found that for soybean crops, the highest Bacillus subtilis concentration of 1 × 10(4) and 1 × 10(10) CFU ml(−1) promoted the highest number of recovered bacteria, when there was no mineral fertilization. However, mineral fertilization limited the number of recovered bacteria, suggesting that mineral fertilization interferes with endophytic colonization. For maize crops, the highest number of recovered bacteria occurred from the concentration of 1 × 10(6) CFU ml(−1), not differing from the highest concentrations. A mineral fertilization dose of 25% promoted the greatest B. subtilis recovery compared to the other treatments. Regarding plant development, the highest microbial inoculum concentrations did not necessarily promote greater positive growth promotion effects compared to the concentration of 1 × 10(4) CFU ml(−1) for both crops. The results also suggest that the higher number of endophytic bacteria recovered in the plant does not necessarily affect plant growth in the same proportion. For soybean plants, there is a strong tendency that with the increase in the B. subtilis inoculant concentration, the need for mineral fertilization doses to achieve the same plant development is consequently increased, and inoculations with 1 × 10(5) and 1 × 10(6) CFU ml(−1) with fertilization doses between 44% and 62% are the ideal combinations for greater plant development. In maize plants, the best growth promotion response (height) was obtained using inoculation concentration of 1 × 10(2) and 1 × 10(10) CFU ml(−1), increasing according to the increase in fertilization doses. The findings suggest, for soybean crop, that these high inoculum concentrations required more photosynthetic metabolites from the plants and more nutrients from the soil. Thus, the need for mineral fertilization for plant growth must be increased.
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spelling pubmed-92985032022-07-21 Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants Bueno, Clara Barros dos Santos, Roberta Mendes de Souza Buzo, Fernando de Andrade da Silva, Maura Santos Reis Rigobelo, Everlon Cid Front Microbiol Microbiology Plant growth-promoting endophytic microorganisms in agriculture have been expanding in Brazil and are an excellent strategy to face the challenges of current agriculture, such as reducing production costs with fewer environmental impacts, without detriment to productivity. However, little is known about the factors that can affect the colonization of endophytic such as inoculant concentration and mineral fertilization. The present study aimed to evaluate the influence of these factors on soybean and maize crops and found that for soybean crops, the highest Bacillus subtilis concentration of 1 × 10(4) and 1 × 10(10) CFU ml(−1) promoted the highest number of recovered bacteria, when there was no mineral fertilization. However, mineral fertilization limited the number of recovered bacteria, suggesting that mineral fertilization interferes with endophytic colonization. For maize crops, the highest number of recovered bacteria occurred from the concentration of 1 × 10(6) CFU ml(−1), not differing from the highest concentrations. A mineral fertilization dose of 25% promoted the greatest B. subtilis recovery compared to the other treatments. Regarding plant development, the highest microbial inoculum concentrations did not necessarily promote greater positive growth promotion effects compared to the concentration of 1 × 10(4) CFU ml(−1) for both crops. The results also suggest that the higher number of endophytic bacteria recovered in the plant does not necessarily affect plant growth in the same proportion. For soybean plants, there is a strong tendency that with the increase in the B. subtilis inoculant concentration, the need for mineral fertilization doses to achieve the same plant development is consequently increased, and inoculations with 1 × 10(5) and 1 × 10(6) CFU ml(−1) with fertilization doses between 44% and 62% are the ideal combinations for greater plant development. In maize plants, the best growth promotion response (height) was obtained using inoculation concentration of 1 × 10(2) and 1 × 10(10) CFU ml(−1), increasing according to the increase in fertilization doses. The findings suggest, for soybean crop, that these high inoculum concentrations required more photosynthetic metabolites from the plants and more nutrients from the soil. Thus, the need for mineral fertilization for plant growth must be increased. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9298503/ /pubmed/35875531 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.901157 Text en Copyright © 2022 Bueno, dos Santos, de Souza Buzo, de Andrade da Silva and Rigobelo. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Bueno, Clara Barros
dos Santos, Roberta Mendes
de Souza Buzo, Fernando
de Andrade da Silva, Maura Santos Reis
Rigobelo, Everlon Cid
Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants
title Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants
title_full Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants
title_fullStr Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants
title_short Effects of Chemical Fertilization and Microbial Inoculum on Bacillus subtilis Colonization in Soybean and Maize Plants
title_sort effects of chemical fertilization and microbial inoculum on bacillus subtilis colonization in soybean and maize plants
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9298503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35875531
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.901157
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