Physiological and agronomic performance of common bean treated with multifunctional microorganisms

Autor: C.C. Rezende, A.S. Nascente, M.A. Silva, L.L.M. Frasca, R.A.C. Pires, M.C.C. Filippi, A.C. Lanna, J.F.A. Silva
Přispěvatelé: CÁSSIA CRISTINA REZENDE, UFG, ADRIANO STEPHAN NASCENTE, CNPAF, MARIANA AGUIAR SILVA, UFG, LAYLLA LUANNA DE MELLO FRASCA, UFG, RAFAEL AUGUSTO CORRÊA PIRES, Centro Universitário de Goiás, MARTA CRISTINA CORSI DE FILIPPI, CNPAF, ANNA CRISTINA LANNA, CNPAF, JOSE FRANCISCO ARRUDA E SILVA, CNPAF.
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Repositório Institucional da EMBRAPA (Repository Open Access to Scientific Information from EMBRAPA-Alice)
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa)
instacron:EMBRAPA
Popis: Multifunctional microorganisms (MM) are able of colonizing root system and shoots and then, provide beneficial effects to the plants. Thus, the objective of this study was test whether multifunctional microorganisms affect gas exchange, macronutrient content, yield components and bean grain yield. A completely randomized design with twenty-six treatments and three replications was used under controlled conditions. Treatments consisted of the application of MM and its combinations in pairs, with nine rhizobacteria isolates BRM 32109, BRM 32110 and 1301 (Bacillus sp.), BRM 32111 and BRM 32112 (Pseudomonas sp.), BRM 32113 (Burkholderia sp.), BRM 32114 (Serratia sp.), 1381 (Azospirillum sp.) and Ab-V5 (Azospirillum brasiliense), an edaphic fungal isolate T-26 (Trichoderma koningiopsis), and a control (without MM). The isolates Ab-V5 and BRM 32112, in addition to the combinations BRM 32114 + T-26, 1301 + BRM 32110 and BRM 32114 + BRM 32110 were the highlights treatments, since they provided increases in gas exchange, in the content of macronutrients and in the agronomic performance. Made available in DSpace on 2022-05-10T21:12:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 rbca-2021.pdf: 1853438 bytes, checksum: 5842a88c7c5900405236819206a5d6c0 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2021
Databáze: OpenAIRE