4.7 Article

The Interactive Effects of Deficit Irrigation and Bacillus pumilus Inoculation on Growth and Physiology of Tomato Plant

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12030670

Keywords

water use efficiency; PGPR; leaf gas exchange; nutrition uptake

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This study investigated the effects of inoculating plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) and soil water deficits on the growth and physiology of tomato plants. The results showed that soil water deficits significantly decreased leaf gas exchange, growth, and water use efficiency (WUE), while reduced irrigation regimes significantly lowered dry matter and plant water use. However, PGPR inoculation had little effect on WUE. The study also found synergistic effects of PGPR and deficit irrigation on leaf gas exchange, leaf abscisic acid content, and stomatal density.
The effects of inoculating plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) and soil water deficits on crop growth and physiology remain largely unknown. Here, the responses of leaf gas exchange, growth, and water use efficiency (WUE) of tomato plants to Bacillus pumilus (B.p.) inoculation under four irrigation strategies (I1-I4) were investigated in a greenhouse. Results showed that soil water deficits, especially at I4 (20%, v/v), significantly decreased leaf stomatal conductance (g(s)), transpiration rate (T-r), and photosynthetic rate (A(n)), and the decrease of g(s) and T-r were more pronounced than A(n). Reduced irrigation regimes significantly lowered dry matter and plant water use both in the non-B.p. control and the B.p. plants, while reduced irrigation significantly increased plant WUE, and B.p. inoculation had little effect on this parameter. Synergistic effects of PGPR and deficit irrigation on leaf gas exchange, leaf abscisic acid content, and stomatal density were found in this study, and specifically, B.p. treated plants at I4 possessed the highest WUE at stomatal and leaf scales, suggesting that B.p. inoculation could optimize water use and partly alleviate the negative effects of soil water deficit. These findings provide useful information for effective irrigation management and the application of PGPR in agriculture in the future.

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