Plant genotype and micronutrient status influence colonization of wheat roots by soil bacteria
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Plant Nutrition
- Vol. 21 (1), 99-113
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01904169809365386
Abstract
Wheat genotypes show differential growth under manganese (Mn) or zinc (Zn) deficiency. A contribution of rhizoplane microorganisms to such a differential response is unclear. This study was conducted to assess changes in bacterial colonization of roots of wheat genotypes differing in growth under Mn or Zn deficiency. Soil microorganisms were extracted from three soils by two‐phase aqueous partitioning and used to inoculate seedlings of four wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) genotypes mounted in growth pouches and supplied with various nutrient solutions. The total count of colony‐forming units (cfu) decreased after extraction compared to soils before extraction, while pseudomonad numbers remained largely unaffected by extraction. Axenic plants grown in pouches and supplied with solutions containing no Zn or Mn showed a decline in shoot growth due to Zn or Mn deficiency. The most Mn‐efficient wheat genotype C8MM (which grows better and yields more than Mn‐inefficient genotypes under Mn‐deficiency conditions) had roots colonized with more pseudomonads than other genotypes. Similarly, Zn‐efficient Aroona sustained colonization of a greater number of non‐pseudomonads under Zn deficiency than under control conditions. Other genotypes showed the same tendency. Four out of 16 different Tn5‐B20 insertion mutants of Pseudomonas fluorescens, which are routinely used in studying the role of root exudates in influencing gene expression in root‐colonizing bacteria, showed better colonization of wheat roots under Zn‐sufficient conditions than under Zn deficiency. In conclusion, Zn and Mn nutrition modifies the quantitative make‐up of the wheat rhizoflora, the effect that is strongly dependent on the genotype. The approaches used here for investigating soil bacteria/plant/micronutrient interactions should have wider applications.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effects of long-term applications of inorganic nitrogen fertilizer on soil nitrogen in the Broadbalk Wheat ExperimentThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1996
- Effects of antibiotics in soil on the population dynamics of transposon Tn5 carrying Pseudomonas fluorescensPlant and Soil, 1995
- The rhizosphere and plant nutrition: a quantitative approachPlant and Soil, 1993
- Responses by iron-efficient and inefficient oat cultivars to inoculation with siderophore-producing bacteria in a calcareous soilBiology and Fertility of Soils, 1993
- A Multiple Component Analysis of the Take-all Disease of CerealsPlant Disease, 1993
- Fluctuations in bacterial populations on the root surface of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) grown under different soil conditionsBiology and Fertility of Soils, 1992
- Substrate flow in the rhizospherePlant and Soil, 1990
- Assimilate translocation to the rhizosphere of two wheat lines and subsequent utilization by rhizosphere microorganisms at two soil nitrogen concentrationsSoil Biology and Biochemistry, 1990
- Non‐infecting rhizosphere micro‐organisms and the mineral nutrition of temperate cerealsJournal of Plant Nutrition, 1983
- Rhizobacteria: Influence of cultivar and soil type on plant growth and yield of potatoSoil Biology and Biochemistry, 1983