Abstract

SUMMARYAntibiotic concentration gradients were used to characterise several cultures of R. phaseoli and Rhizobium spp. (isolated from Cicer arietinum) by differences in intrinsic antibiotic resistance (IAR). Differentiation between cultures was facilitated by use of cluster analyses. The method permitted 15/16 cultures of R. phaseoli to be distinguished on 14 antibiotics. Two cultures which exhibited similar IAR patterns were shown to be the same strain obtained from different collections. The validity of the technique for strain identification was demonstrated by fluorescent antibody tests which gave corresponding identity for 50 nodule isolates from plants inoculated with a mixture of three strains of R. phaseoli. The method was less suitable for characterising cultures of the slow‐growing Rhizobium spp. because several antibiotics produced growth lacking a clearly defined boundary between resistance and susceptibility. Although 15/16 cultures of Rhizobium spp. could be differentiated, several isolates were distinguishable only by a difference on a single antibiotic. Similarity between stock cultures and derivative nodule isolates indicated that IAR on gradient plates was a stable property unaffected by plant passage.

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