Abstract

Global population growth and climate change raise a challenge to agriculture, which, combined with the issues concerning the use of chemical fertilizers, have generated increasing attention in the use of plant-associated bacteria as a sustainable strategy in agri-food systems. The objective of this study is to evaluate the ability of five bacterial strains, previously isolated from the rhizosphere or endosphere of plants adapted to harsh environmental conditions, to act as potential plant biofertilizers in different conditions of water availability. The strain biosafety for a deliberate environmental release was investigated through a literature survey and antibiotic resistance testing. The selected strains were first characterized for their plant growth–promoting (PGP) and rhizocompetence-related traits through in vitro assays and then on short-term in vivo experiments on tomato plants. A long-term greenhouse experiment was further conducted to monitor the PGP effect of the bacteria during the entire life cycle of tomato plants subjected to full irrigation or to severe water deficit conditions, aiming to assess their actual effect on plant productivity, which is the ultimate target of the agricultural sector. Some of the strains showed a potential in improving water use efficiency and mitigating plant water stress. Under severe irrigation deficit, four of the tested strains, Micrococcus yunnanensis M1, Bacillus simplex RP-26, Pseudomonas stutzeri SR7-77, and Paenarthrobacter nitroguajacolicus 2–50, significantly increased the number of productive plants in comparison to non-bacterized control ones. Two of them, Bacillus simplex RP-26 and Paenarthrobacter nitroguajacolicus 2–50, demonstrated also, under full irrigation, to significantly improve the water productivity in comparison with non-bacterized plants. Despite all the strains showed promising PGP potential in short-term assays, the positive effect of the bacterial inoculants on plant physiology and fruit yield was observed in some cases but never corroborated by statistical significance. These results highlight the importance of performing long-term in vivo experiments to define the real PGP ability of a bacterial inoculant to positively impact plant production.

Highlights

  • A new revolution in the agricultural sector is needed to sustain and increase the productivity of cultural lands based on fewer intensive inputs having reduced environmental impact (GAP Report, 2018)

  • Three strains were isolated from extremophilic plants: (i) Micrococcus yunnanensis M1 was isolated from the endosphere of Avicennia marina mangrove propagules as described by Soldan et al (2019). (ii) The endophytic strain Bacillus simplex RP-26 was isolated from the leaves of a plant species that survives extreme dehydration, Selaginella lepidophylla. (iii) Pseudomonas stutzeri SR7-77 was isolated from the rhizosphere of Salicornia strobilacea, a halophilic plant collected in a coastal area in Tunisia (Marasco et al, 2016)

  • The bacterial strains used in the present study belonged to five different species and were selected among collections of bacterial isolates obtained from plants naturally adapted to cope with different harsh environmental conditions

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Summary

Introduction

A new revolution in the agricultural sector is needed to sustain and increase the productivity of cultural lands based on fewer intensive inputs having reduced environmental impact (GAP Report, 2018). The intensive agriculture practices, used in the last decades to meet the needs of a rapidly growing population, have high environmental impacts, such as the increase of agrochemical pollution and ecosystem deterioration (Backer et al, 2018; Saleem et al, 2019). Soil microorganisms have been suggested as the backbone of a sustainable food production system with high yield and low input (Saleem et al, 2019). PGP microorganism importance on the fertilizer market is constantly increasing, and the compound annual growth rate surged at 12.9% between 2017 and 2025 according to the Transparency Market Research report (2017)

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