Abstract

Ensuring adequate populations of effective rhizobia in soil is essential to guarantee optimum nodulation and nitrogen fixation in legumes. The population of soybean-rhizobia and the proportion of slow and fast growers were enumerated in Vertisols of central India in different crop rotations for three years during 2013-15. Soils were from soybean-based (soybean-wheat and soybean-chickpea) and cereal-based rotations (maize-wheat, rice-wheat and maize-chickpea) rotations. Soybean-based rotations stimulated the rhizobial population by 22-fold compared to cereal rotations. Lowest populations were in the summer but increased in soybean rotations by 13.3-fold after the rainy season to 2743cellsg−1 soil at maximum vegetative growth. In the cereal rotations, the increase was by 1.7-fold to 61cellsg−1 soil. Long-term integrated nutrient management, by annual application of farmyard manure in soybean along with chemical fertilizers, improved the rhizobial numbers by 1.5-fold over chemical fertilization alone and by 2.9-fold over unfertilized treatments. Increased crop growth by chemical fertilizers also stimulated rhizobial populations by 1.9-fold over unfertilized soybean. The proportion of slow-growing soybean rhizobia was lower in soybean-based rotations (38%) compared to cereal-based rotations (62%), showing that continued soybean growth led to a greater proliferation of fast-growing rhizobia. Application of farmyard manure did not change the proportion of slow growers. The proportion of slow growers was ∼15% more in winter compared with the summer populations. The slow growers were symbiotically superior, producing greater dry matter and nodule mass (+12%), with more biologically fixed nitrogen (+18%) than the fast growers. Results highlight the importance of crop rotation with cereals, application of organic amendments along with chemical fertilizers and selection of slow-growing rhizobia as inoculants.

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