Abstract

Suboptimal root zone temperatures (RZTs) (below 25°C) in Canada until July may adversely affect the secretion of interorganismal signal molecules such as genistein by soybean and hence, the soybean-Bradyrhizobium symbiosis. We also proposed for the first time that soil texture might play a role in these biochemical communications. Soybean plants, planted in undisturbed soil samples (with sandy, loamy and clay textures), collected from the field, were subjected to three different soil temperatures (14, 19 and 24°C). Bradyrhizobium japonicum (strain 532C) inocula, preincubated with four levels of genistein (0, 5, 10 and 20 µM), were used to inoculate the plants. The experiment was conducted at the research greenhouse of Macdonald Campus, McGill University, Canada. The effects of genistein 5 and 20 µM on soybean nodulation and growth were significant at 14°C. As genistein was more effective in loamy and clay soils, soil texture may also be a determining factor in the biochemical communications between B. japonicum and soybean.

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