Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains

Nitrogen fixation through legume-rhizobium symbiosis serves as a cost effective, sustainable and ecofriendly source of N to fodder and grain legume crops. However, there is a need to identify effective rhizobial inoculants compatible with a particular legume. An experiment was conducted to evaluate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Woldemeskel, Endalkachew, Dogiso, E., Haile, Wassie
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Academic Journals 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76486
_version_ 1855519929303826432
author Woldemeskel, Endalkachew
Dogiso, E.
Haile, Wassie
author_browse Dogiso, E.
Haile, Wassie
Woldemeskel, Endalkachew
author_facet Woldemeskel, Endalkachew
Dogiso, E.
Haile, Wassie
author_sort Woldemeskel, Endalkachew
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Nitrogen fixation through legume-rhizobium symbiosis serves as a cost effective, sustainable and ecofriendly source of N to fodder and grain legume crops. However, there is a need to identify effective rhizobial inoculants compatible with a particular legume. An experiment was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of forty indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains on Sesbania sesban L. Merr. Each strain was cultured in yeast manitol broth for 3-5 days and inoculated to sesbania seedlings. Unfertilized (-N) and N fertilized (+N) treatments were also included as control treatments. Results revealed that Rhizobium strains have significantly affected nodulation, growth and N content (NC) of sesbania. Based on their relative effectiveness on seedling growth of sesbania, the test strains were grouped into six clusters. Eight strains (20%) in clusters VI, V and VI produced significantly higher nodulation, growth and NC on seedlings of sesbania than those produced by all other strains and +N treatment. On average, these strains increased shoot dry matter and NC by 50 and 50.8 % over +N treatments, respectively. Their mean symbiotic effectiveness (SE) values were > 85 % and hence are classified as highly efficient strains. In conclusion, there is a significant possibility of being able to isolate effective strains, which can be used as inoculants for sesbania, from rhizobial biodiversity resources in Ethiopian soils.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace76486
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Academic Journals
publisherStr Academic Journals
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace764862024-04-25T06:00:37Z Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains Woldemeskel, Endalkachew Dogiso, E. Haile, Wassie animal feeding forage legumes Nitrogen fixation through legume-rhizobium symbiosis serves as a cost effective, sustainable and ecofriendly source of N to fodder and grain legume crops. However, there is a need to identify effective rhizobial inoculants compatible with a particular legume. An experiment was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of forty indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains on Sesbania sesban L. Merr. Each strain was cultured in yeast manitol broth for 3-5 days and inoculated to sesbania seedlings. Unfertilized (-N) and N fertilized (+N) treatments were also included as control treatments. Results revealed that Rhizobium strains have significantly affected nodulation, growth and N content (NC) of sesbania. Based on their relative effectiveness on seedling growth of sesbania, the test strains were grouped into six clusters. Eight strains (20%) in clusters VI, V and VI produced significantly higher nodulation, growth and NC on seedlings of sesbania than those produced by all other strains and +N treatment. On average, these strains increased shoot dry matter and NC by 50 and 50.8 % over +N treatments, respectively. Their mean symbiotic effectiveness (SE) values were > 85 % and hence are classified as highly efficient strains. In conclusion, there is a significant possibility of being able to isolate effective strains, which can be used as inoculants for sesbania, from rhizobial biodiversity resources in Ethiopian soils. 2016-07-15 2016-08-16T08:32:53Z 2016-08-16T08:32:53Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76486 en Open Access Academic Journals Wolde-meskel, E., Dogiso, E. and Haile, W. 2016. Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains. African Journal of Plant Science 10(7):136-144.
spellingShingle animal feeding
forage
legumes
Woldemeskel, Endalkachew
Dogiso, E.
Haile, Wassie
Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains
title Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains
title_full Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains
title_fullStr Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains
title_full_unstemmed Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains
title_short Response of Sesbania (Sesbania sesban L. Merr.) to inoculation with indigenous isolates of Rhizobium strains
title_sort response of sesbania sesbania sesban l merr to inoculation with indigenous isolates of rhizobium strains
topic animal feeding
forage
legumes
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76486
work_keys_str_mv AT woldemeskelendalkachew responseofsesbaniasesbaniasesbanlmerrtoinoculationwithindigenousisolatesofrhizobiumstrains
AT dogisoe responseofsesbaniasesbaniasesbanlmerrtoinoculationwithindigenousisolatesofrhizobiumstrains
AT hailewassie responseofsesbaniasesbaniasesbanlmerrtoinoculationwithindigenousisolatesofrhizobiumstrains