AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the use of a native bacterial consortium as a bioinoculant to boost crop yield and optimize nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) in durum wheat cultivated in Mexico.
  • The inoculation of these bacteria significantly increased grain yield by up to 2.0 tons per hectare compared to non-inoculated controls, demonstrating their effectiveness in enhancing crop productivity while maintaining grain quality.
  • Although no overall improvement in NUE was found at certain nitrogen levels, notable increases in NUE were observed when comparing lower urea applications to full fertilization, highlighting the potential benefits of using bioinoculants.

Article Abstract

The use of plant growth-promoting bacteria as bioinoculants is a powerful tool to increase crop yield and quality and to improve nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) from fertilizers in plants. This study aimed to bioprospecting a native bacterial consortium ( subsp. TE3, TRQ8, and TRQ65), through bioinformatic analysis, and to quantify the impact of its inoculation on NUE (measured through N-isotopic techniques), grain yield, and grain quality of durum wheat variety CIRNO C2008 grown under three doses of urea (0, 120, and 240 kg N ha) during two consecutive agricultural cycles in the Yaqui Valley, Mexico. The inoculation of the bacterial consortium (BC) to the wheat crop, at a total N concentration of 123-225 kg N ha increased crop productivity and maintained grain quality, resulting in a yield increase of 1.1 ton ha (6.0 vs. 7.1 ton ha, 0 kg N ha added, 123 kg N ha in the soil) and of 2.0 ton ha (5.9 vs. 7.9 ton ha, 120 kg N ha added, 104 kg N ha in the soil) compared to the uninoculated controls at the same doses of N. The genomic bioinformatic analysis of the studied strains showed a great number of biofertilization-related genes regarding N and Fe acquisition, P assimilation, CO fixation, Fe, P, and K solubilization, with important roles in agroecosystems, as well as genes related to the production of siderophores and stress response. A positive effect of the BC on NUE at the studied initial N content (123 and 104 kg N ha) was not observed. Nevertheless, increases of 14 % and 12.5 % on NUE (whole plant) were observed when 120 kg N ha was applied compared to when wheat was fully fertilized (240 kg N ha). This work represents a link between bioinformatic approaches of a native bacterial inoculant and the quantification of its impact on durum wheat.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11256204PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.crmicr.2024.100230DOI Listing

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