Abstract

Soil microbes play a vital role in improving plant growth, soil health, ameliorate biotic/abiotic stress and enhance crop productivity. The present study was aimed to investigate a coordinated effect of compatible consortium [salt tolerating Rhizobium and rhizobacterium with 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) deaminase] in enhancing plant growth promoting (PGP) traits, symbiotic efficiency, nutrient acquisition, anti-oxidative enzymes, grain yield and associated profitability in spring mungbean. We identified a non-pathogenic compatible Rhizobium sp. LSMR-32 (MH644039.1) and Enterococcus mundtii LSMRS-3 (MH644178.1) from salt affected areas of Punjab, India and the same were assessed to develop consortium biofertilizer based on salt tolerance, multifarious PGP traits, antagonistic defense activities and presence of nifH, acds, pqq, and ipdc genes. Indole Acetic acid (IAA), P-solubilization, biofilm formation, exo-polysaccharides, siderophore, salt tolerance, ACC deaminase activities were all found highly significant in dual inoculant (LSMR-32 + LSMRS-3) treatment compared to LSMR-32 alone. Under saline soil conditions, dual inoculant showed a higher seed germination, plant height, biomass, chlorophyll content and macro and micro-nutrient uptake, than un-inoculated control. However, symbiotic (nodulation, nodule biomass and leghaemoglobin content) and soil quality parameters (phosphatase and soil dehydrogenase enzymes) increased numerically with LSMR-32 + LSMRS-3 over Rhizobium sp. LSMR-32 alone. Dual bacterial inoculation (LSMR-32 + LSMRS-3) increased the proline content (2.05 fold), anti-oxidative enzymes viz., superoxide dismutase (1.50 fold), catalase (1.43 fold) and peroxidase (3.88 folds) in contrast to control treatment. Decreased Na+ accumulation and increased K+ uptake resulted in favorable K+/Na+ ratio through ion homeostasis. Co-inoculation of Rhizobium sp. LSMR-32 and Enterococcus mundtii LSMRS-3 significantly improved the grain yield by 8.92% and led to superior B: C ratio over Rhizobium sp. alone under salt stress. To best of our knowledge this is perhaps the first field report from Indian soils that largely describes dual inoculation of Rhizobium sp. LSMR-32 and Enterococcus mundtii LSMRS-3 and the same can be considered as a game-changer approach to simultaneously induce salt tolerance and improve productivity in spring mungbean under saline stress conditions.

Highlights

  • Improving productivity and quality of crops to feed the growing population is a major limiting factor worldwide

  • A total of 21 Rhizobium and 42 rhizobacteria were isolated from nodules and rhizospheric soil on Congo Red Yeast Extract Mannitol Agar (CRYEMA) and Nutrient Agar (NA) medium supplemented with 10% NaCl

  • LSMR-32 and rhizobacterium LSMRS3 were selected on the basis of salt tolerance (@10% NaCl concentration) and high growth on Dworkin and Foster (DF) minimal salt medium containing ACC (Supplementary Table 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Improving productivity and quality of crops to feed the growing population is a major limiting factor worldwide. In 21st century, increasing global population and lesser availability of cultivated land causing threats to sustainability due to loss of irrigation water resources, soil salinization, water and environmental pollution (Shahbaz and Ashraf, 2013). Soil salinity is one of the most devastating stresses, which causes major reduction in crop productivity, quality and cultivated land area (Foyer et al, 2016; Nadeem et al, 2016; Singh and Jha, 2017). Soil salinity has affected more than 1000 million hectares of cultivated land (Gupta and Pandey, 2019a) causing loss of 27.3 billion US$ in crop production affecting 20 and 33% of total cultivated and irrigated agricultural lands, respectively (Qadir et al, 2014; Bhise and Dandge, 2019). It is essential to improve the salt tolerance in crops to minimize the grain yield losses

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