Abstract
The use of phosphate-solubilising bacteria as inoculants increases plant phosphorus (P) uptake and thus crop yield. Strains from the genus Mesorhizobium are among the most powerful phosphate solubilizing microorganisms. In order to study efficiency in P uptake and N2 fixation in chickpea (Cicer aritenium), forty-two rhizobia strains natively from Tunisian soils were studied in symbiosis with the chickpea variety “Béja1” which is frequently cultivated in Tunisia. Plants were inoculated separately with these strains under controlled conditions in perlite under two sources of P i.e. soluble (KH2PO4) and insoluble P (Ca2HPO4). At flowering stage, growth, nodulation, P uptake and N2 fixation were assessed in all symbiotic combinations. The results showed that the S27 strain efficiently mobilized P into plants, observed as a significant increase of plant P content when insoluble P (Ca2HPO4) was supplied to the soil. This was associated with a significant increase in plant biomass, nodule number and N content under insoluble P conditions. Additionally, inoculation with the Mesorhizobium strain S27 significantly increased the root acid phosphatase activity under insoluble P. This study also shows significant correlations found between plant P content and acid phosphatase activity under low P conditions which may highlight the contribution of acid phosphatases in increasing P use efficiency. A field experiment also showed that most of the chickpea analyzed parameters were improved when plants inoculated with two selected rhizobia strains (S26 and S27) and supplied with P2O5. Overall, these findings postulate that rhizobial inoculation should not only be based on the effectiveness of strains regarding N fixation, but also to other traits such as P solubilisation potential.
Published Version
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