Abstract

Strains ofKlebsiella pneumoniae, Klebsiella terrigena, Enterobacter agglomerans andAzospirillum lipoferum were compared as diazotrophic inoculants in association withPoa pratensis andTriticum aestivum. Each strain colonized both plants in numbers ranging from 104 to 107 bacteria per root, and electron microscopy and immunofluorescence staining of inoculated roots revealed bacteria mainly on root hairs. Indirect immunofluorescence with specific antifimbriae antibodies showed that the enteric bacteria expressed their fimbria in both associations. All associations were positive in an acetylene reduction test but only in half of them was atmospheric nitrogen transferred to the plant. In the inoculated plants, variable effects in the dry matter and N yields in both hosts were observed and no correlation was found between dry matter, nitrogen content or the amount of fixed nitrogen. In infected plants, the number of root hairs and lateral roots increased and the length of the zone of elongation decreased. The changes in root morphology were more evident in associations with enteric bacteria than with Azospirillum. The results give further evidence on the importance of bacterial adhesion in associative N2 fixation and suggest that bacteria-induced physiological changes in plant roots may be more important than the amount of nitrogen transferred to the plant.

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