Abstract

Solanum lycocarpum St. Hil. is an endemic plant of the Brazilian tropical savannah (cerrado) that is capable of growing on acidic and nutrient-poor land, an ability which attracts attention to its rhizospheric microbiota, including plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR). In this work, 131 bacterial strains were isolated from rhizosphere samples of S. lycocarpum and were tested in vitro for direct mechanisms of plant growth promotion (biological nitrogen fixation, phosphate solubilization and indolic compounds production) and enzyme activities. The 26 most promising isolates selected from the previous tests were used to continue the screening. Ten of these isolates showed antifungal activity against fourteen phytopathogenic fungi and twelve isolates showed antimicrobial activity against at least one of the three clinical pathogens evaluated. Seven of the 26 isolates were identified at random as belonging to the genera Bacillus, Burkholderia and Microbacterium, are PGPR and have potential to participate in more in-depth research aimed at the development of bio-inputs, especially the Bacillus strains.   Key words: Biological control, biotechnological potential, cerrado, plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR), phytopathogenic fungi, Rhizosphere, Solanum lycocarpum St. Hil.

Highlights

  • The Brazilian tropical savannah biome is a mosaic of savannah, forests and grasslands with high species richness

  • Studies focusing on the isolation and characterization of rhizobacteria from native plant specimens from the Brazilian savannah biome are rare

  • The present work is the first report on the characterization, identification and isolation of rhizospheric bacteria from S. lycocarpum in Brazil

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Summary

Introduction

The Brazilian tropical savannah (cerrado) biome is a mosaic of savannah, forests and grasslands with high species richness. This biome comprises approximately 2 million hectares or 24% of Brazil‟s land surface and is surpassed only by the Amazonian forest. The cerrado hosts approximately 6,000 vascular plant species, featuring the highest floral biodiversity among the world's savannas.

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