Abstract

The effect of inoculation with Frankia, a N-fixing actinomycete, on the growth of Alnus sieboldiana seedlings was studied on unsterilized soil from a nursery and an alder stand (forest of Alnus firma). The seedlings of A. sieboldiana were inoculated with Frankia before or after a 2-month culture on sterilized vermiculite, during which they nodulated, and transplanted to unsterilized soil from the nursery and the alder stand. The control seedlings were also cultured on sterilized vermiculite for about 2 months and transplanted to unsterilized soil without Frankia inoculation. The seedling growth, nodulation and N-fixing activity were measured 3, 10 and 16 weeks after the transplantation. Growth and nodule biomass of the seedlings inoculated with Frankia and those grown on the alder soil were better than those without inoculation with Frankia and grown on the nursery soil, respectively. The seedlings inoculated before spontaneous nodulation grew better than those inoculated at the transplantation. Nitrogen-fixing activity measured by acetylene reduction assay at 16 weeks after the transplantation was higher in the seedlings grown on the soil from the nursery than on the soil from the alder stand.

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