Abstract
Plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) are known to establish positive relationships with plants. They act in favoring plant nutrition, production of phytohormones, control of pathogens and enhancement of stress tolerance. Thus, this study aimed to isolate bacteria from soil, rhizosphere, and root endosphere from sugarcane cultivated in the Southeastern of Brazil, to prospect strains with potential for plant growth promotion. The samples were plated in Nutrient Agar medium, and the morphologically distinct colonies were isolated and analyzed about indoleacetic acid production, phosphate solubilization and the growth control of the phytopathogenic fungus Fusarium verticillioides. A total of 219 isolates were obtained, of which 86 from soil, 67 from rhizosphere and 66 from sugarcane root endosphere. The strains that presented more than one mechanism of plant growth promotion were identified by the sequencing of 16S gene. Most species belonged to the genus Bacillus, which has strains already used in various biological products for the control of diseases in agriculture. Some Bacillus species isolated in our study have never been isolated from sugarcane, and others have been studied for the first time as plant growth promoters. The isolated strains constitute an important microbial bank to be explored to compose innovative products for agriculture.
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