Abstract

Barren desert soil that otherwise could not support perennial plant growth was amended with six levels of common agricultural compost. Seedlings of the giant cardon cactus, one of the primary plant species responsible for soil stabilization in the southern Sonoran Desert, were inoculated with the plant-growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense Cd, planted, and grown for 18 months under nursery conditions typical for slow- growth cacti. Control plants were grown without compost amendment, without inoculation (negative control), or in fertile, rare "resource island" soil preferred by cardon seedlings (positive control). During the prolonged growth period, the decisive factor in seedling growth in barren soil was the addition of small amounts of common compost; 6 to 25% of the growth substrate volume gave the best growth response and, to a lesser extent, so did inoculation with A. brasilense Cd. Although the bacteria significantly affects plant growth when amended with "resource island" soil and added to barren soil, its effect on plant growth was far smaller than when compost alone was added. Compost added to barren soil significantly increased the dry weight parameters of the plant to almost similar levels obtained by the "resource island" soil; however, the compost amend- ment supports a more voluminous and greener plant with elevated pigment levels. This study shows that barren soil supplemented with compost can replace the rare "resource island" soil for cardon nurseries destined to abate soil erosion in the desert.

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