AI Article Synopsis

  • Actinobacteria, such as the Streptomyces SH9 strain, can enhance mycorrhizal symbiosis by producing beneficial metabolites, which help plants absorb more nutrients and grow better.
  • The study focused on raspberry plants (Rubus idaeus) in Patagonia, Argentina, investigating the effects of different inoculation treatments with arbuscular mycorrhizae fungi (AM) and the Streptomyces strain in both sterile and natural soils.
  • Results indicated that natural soil yielded higher mycorrhization compared to sterile soil, with the greatest benefits seen in co-inoculated plants, suggesting that using actinobacteria could improve raspberry crop yields in an eco-friendly way.

Article Abstract

Actinobacteria may help the mycorrhizal symbiosis by producing various bioactive metabolites. Mycorrhizae, in turn, are very important since they increase the absorption of nutrients, promoting the growth of their host plant and making inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizae fungi (AM) a common practice applied in agriculture and forestry. The cultivation of Rubus idaeus (raspberry) is widespread in Patagonia, Argentina; however, the potential benefits of using actinobacteria-mycorrhizal inoculums to enhance crop growth and yield remain unexplored. The objective of this work was to study the interaction between actinobacteria (Streptomyces, Actinomycetota) and AM in raspberry plants. We performed an experiment applying 4 treatments to raspberry plants growing in two substrates, sterile soil and natural (non-sterile) soil. The treatments consisted in a control (without inoculation) and three inoculations treatments (AM, Streptomyces SH9 strain, and AM + Streptomyces). After 3 months of inoculation, mycorrhization parameters (%) and plant growth were recorded. When comparing both substrates, the mycorrhization parameters were higher in natural soil than in sterile soil. The co-inoculation with AM + Streptomyces SH9 showed the highest mycorrhization. Both factors (treatment x substrate) interacted showing that in sterile soil the treatments with the highest effect on mycorrhization parameters were AM and the co-inoculation, while in natural soil all inoculations improved mycorrhization parameters, being highest with the co-inoculation. These results show that Streptomyces SH9 strain helps the mycorrhizal symbiosis in raspberry, being the first report about the effect of a native rhizospheric actinobacterium on an economically important species, promising potential for environmentally friendly improvements in raspberry crops within the temperate Southern Patagonian region.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00284-024-03928-xDOI Listing

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