4.7 Article

Exploration of the rhizosphere microbiome of native plant Ceanothus velutinus - an excellent resource of plant growth-promoting bacteria

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.979069

Keywords

rhizosphere; plant growth promoting rhiobacteria (PGPR); native plants; Ceanothus velutinus; Intermountain West (US); snowbrush ceanothus

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Funding

  1. United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Hatch project [UTA01447]
  2. Utah Department of Agriculture and Food Specialty Crop Block Grant Program, New Faculty Start-Up Funds from the Office of Research and Graduate Studies
  3. Utah Agricultural Experiment Station (UAES) at Utah State University

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Continuous demand for increased food production due to climate change and population growth requires stress-resilient, sustainable agriculture. Overuse of chemical fertilizers and monoculture farming has negatively impacted soil health and its microbiome. This study identifies potential rhizosphere microbiomes for plant growth promotion and soil health improvement, offering alternatives to chemical fertilizers and promoting sustainable agriculture.
Continuous demand for an increase in food production due to climate change and a steady rise in world population requires stress-resilient, sustainable agriculture. Overuse of chemical fertilizers and monoculture farming to achieve this goal deteriorated soil health and negatively affected its microbiome. The rhizosphere microbiome of a plant plays a significant role in its growth and development and promotes the plant's overall health through nutrient uptake/availability, stress tolerance, and biocontrol activity. The Intermountain West (IW) region of the US is rich in native plants recommended for low water use landscaping because of their drought tolerance. The rhizosphere microbiome of these native plants is an excellent resource for plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) to use these microbes as biofertilizers and biostimulants to enhance food production, mitigate environmental stresses and an alternative for chemical fertilizer, and improve soil health. Here, we isolated, purified, identified, and characterized 64 bacterial isolates from a native plant, Ceanothus velutinus, commonly known as snowbrush ceanothus, from the natural habitat and the greenhouse-grown native soil-treated snowbrush ceanothus plants. We also conducted a microbial diversity analysis of the rhizosphere of greenhouse-grown native soil-treated and untreated plants (control). Twenty-seven of the 64 isolates were from the rhizosphere of the native region, and 36 were from the greenhouse-grown native soil-treated plants. These isolates were also tested for plant growth-promoting (PGP) traits such as their ability to produce catalase, siderophore, and indole acetic acid, fix atmospheric nitrogen and solubilize phosphate. Thirteen bacterial isolates tested positive for all five plant growth-promoting abilities and belonged to the genera Pantoea, Pseudomonas, Bacillus, and Ancylobacter. Besides, there are isolates belonging to the genus Streptomyces, Bacillus, Peribacillus, Variovorax, Xenophilus, Brevundimonas, and Priestia, which exhibit at least one of the plant growth-promoting activities. This initial screen provided a list of potential PGPR to test for plant health improvement on model and crop plants. Most of the bacterial isolates in this study have a great potential to become biofertilizers and bio-stimulants.

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