Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans

The effect of soil fertility on the response of field beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) to inoculation with Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli was investigated at five sites in northern and central Malawi. A split-plot design consisting of (a) un-inoculated plants, (b) inoculated plants and (c) N-fert...

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Main Authors: Lupwayi, N.Z., Mkandawire, A.B.C.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/55856
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author Lupwayi, N.Z.
Mkandawire, A.B.C.
author_browse Lupwayi, N.Z.
Mkandawire, A.B.C.
author_facet Lupwayi, N.Z.
Mkandawire, A.B.C.
author_sort Lupwayi, N.Z.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effect of soil fertility on the response of field beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) to inoculation with Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli was investigated at five sites in northern and central Malawi. A split-plot design consisting of (a) un-inoculated plants, (b) inoculated plants and (c) N-fertilized plants as main-plot treatments and (i) low fertility (no additional nutrients applied) and (ii) high fertility (P, S, and Mo applied) was adopted. Nodulation was highest at Sokola (84 nodules per plant) and lowest on an acid soil at Lunyangwa (11 nodules per plant). There was no significant response (p more than 0.05) in nodule number to inoculation at all sites, i.e., un inoculated plants formed as many nodules as inoculated plants. This is indicative of a large population of indigenous rhizobia in the soils, which implies that competition for nodulation between inoculant and indigenous rhizobia is probably an important factor in response to inoculation. Improved soil fertility increased nodule number by up to 500 percent,probably by stimulating multiplication of rhizobia in the bean root rhizosphere. However, improved nodulation was translated into a significant increase in grain yield only at Champhira, where correlation between nodule number and grain yield was also significant (r = 0.72, p less than 0.01)
format Conference Paper
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institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1992
publishDateRange 1992
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publisherStr International Center for Tropical Agriculture
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spelling CGSpace558562024-01-09T09:49:45Z Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans Lupwayi, N.Z. Mkandawire, A.B.C. phaseolus vulgaris soil fertility fertilizer application inoculation methods rhizobium root nodulation crop yield malawi fertilidad del suelo aplicación de abonos inoculación nodulación rendimiento de cultivos The effect of soil fertility on the response of field beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) to inoculation with Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli was investigated at five sites in northern and central Malawi. A split-plot design consisting of (a) un-inoculated plants, (b) inoculated plants and (c) N-fertilized plants as main-plot treatments and (i) low fertility (no additional nutrients applied) and (ii) high fertility (P, S, and Mo applied) was adopted. Nodulation was highest at Sokola (84 nodules per plant) and lowest on an acid soil at Lunyangwa (11 nodules per plant). There was no significant response (p more than 0.05) in nodule number to inoculation at all sites, i.e., un inoculated plants formed as many nodules as inoculated plants. This is indicative of a large population of indigenous rhizobia in the soils, which implies that competition for nodulation between inoculant and indigenous rhizobia is probably an important factor in response to inoculation. Improved soil fertility increased nodule number by up to 500 percent,probably by stimulating multiplication of rhizobia in the bean root rhizosphere. However, improved nodulation was translated into a significant increase in grain yield only at Champhira, where correlation between nodule number and grain yield was also significant (r = 0.72, p less than 0.01) 1992 2015-01-28T14:21:54Z 2015-01-28T14:21:54Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/55856 en Open Access International Center for Tropical Agriculture Lupwayi, N.Z.; Mkandawire, A.B.C. 1992. Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans. In: Allen, David J. (ed.). SADC/CIAT Bean Research Workshop (3, 1992, Mbabane, Swaziland). Proceedings. Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), Network on Bean Research in Africa, Dar es Salaam, TZ. p. 89-102. (CIAT African workshop series no. 27)
spellingShingle phaseolus vulgaris
soil fertility
fertilizer application
inoculation methods
rhizobium
root nodulation
crop yield
malawi
fertilidad del suelo
aplicación de abonos
inoculación
nodulación
rendimiento de cultivos
Lupwayi, N.Z.
Mkandawire, A.B.C.
Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans
title Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans
title_full Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans
title_fullStr Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans
title_full_unstemmed Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans
title_short Improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of Phaseolus beans
title_sort improved soil fertiliy increases nodulation of phaseolus beans
topic phaseolus vulgaris
soil fertility
fertilizer application
inoculation methods
rhizobium
root nodulation
crop yield
malawi
fertilidad del suelo
aplicación de abonos
inoculación
nodulación
rendimiento de cultivos
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/55856
work_keys_str_mv AT lupwayinz improvedsoilfertiliyincreasesnodulationofphaseolusbeans
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