AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how different carrier materials affect the viability of a microbial consortium during storage, testing the formulations for one year at both refrigerated and room temperatures.
  • The most effective bioformulation was found to be a combination of talc and gluten (B4), which maintained a high colony forming unit count after long-term storage and demonstrated significant benefits for spinach growth.
  • Application of B4 improved spinach's biomass, leaf area, chlorophyll content, and soil nutrient levels, suggesting it could be an eco-friendly alternative to chemical fertilizers for enhancing crop productivity and soil health.

Article Abstract

The current study was undertaken to determine the ability of different carrier materials for sustaining the viability of microbial consortium during storage. Different bioformulations consisting of carrier material and microbial consortium were prepared and examined for viability and stability for one year stored at 4 °C and ambient temperature. Total 8 bio-formulations were prepared consisting five economically viable carriers (gluten, talc, charcoal, bentonite, broth medium) and a microbial consortium. In present study, maximum enhanced shelf-life of consortium based on colony forming unit count were recorded for talc + gluten based (B4) bioformulation (9.03 log cfu/g) over other bio-formulations stored for 360 days. Furthermore, the pot experiments was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of B4 formulation on growth of spinach in comparison with recommended dose of chemical fertilizer, uninoculated and no amendment control. The results depicted that B4 formulation increased biomass (176-666%), leaf area (33-123%), chlorophyll content (131-789%) and protein content (68.4-94.4%) of spinach over controls. Further B4 application significantly increased the nutrients like available nitrogen (131-475%), phosphorus (75-178%) and potassium (31-191%) of pot soil along with noteworthy improvement in root colonization as evident from scanning electron microscope analysis in comparison to controls at 60 days after sowing. Therefore, exploiting B4 formulation can serve as the environmentally sound approach to enhance the productivity, biomass and nutritional value of spinach. Thus, Plant growth promoting microbes-based formulation can be the novel paradigm to improve the soil health and eventually the crop productivity in economical and sustainable manner.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11274-023-03594-4DOI Listing

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