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Changes in Bacterial Diversity and Composition in Response to Co-inoculation of Arbuscular Mycorrhizae and Zinc-Solubilizing Bacteria in Turmeric Rhizosphere

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CURRENT MICROBIOLOGY
卷 79, 期 1, 页码 -

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00284-021-02682-8

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The impact of co-inoculation of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and zinc solubilizing bacteria on the growth of turmeric plants, soil microbial activity, and bacterial diversity in the rhizosphere was examined. The results showed that the co-inoculation treatment enhanced plant growth and soil microbial activity, and caused changes in bacterial community structure and diversity.
In the present study, the impact of co-inoculation of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AM Rhizophagus sp., NCBI-MN710507) and Zinc solubilizing bacteria (ZSB2- Bacillus megaterium, NCBI-KY687496) on plant growth, soil dehydrogenase activity, soil respiration and the changes in bacterial diversity in rhizosphere of turmeric (Curcuma longa) were examined. Our results showed that higher plant height and dry biomass were observed in treatments co-inoculated with AM and ZSB2. Likewise, dehydrogenase activity and soil respiration were more significant in the co-inoculation treatment, indicating abundance of introduced as well as inherent microflora. Bacterial community analysis using 16S rRNA revealed changes in the structure and diversity of various taxa due to co-inoculation of AM and ZSB2. Alpha diversity indexes (Shannon and Chao1) and beta diversity indexes obtained through unweighted unifrac approach also showed variation among the treated samples. Chloroflexi was the dominant phylum followed by Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria and Acidobacteria which accounted for 80% of all treated samples. The composition of bacterial communities at genus level revealed that co-inoculation caused distinct bacterial profiles. The Linear discriminant analysis effect size revealed the dominance of ecologically significant genera such as Bradyrhizobium, Candidatus, Pedomicrbium, Thermoporothrix, Acinetobacter and Nitrospira in treatments co-inoculated with AM and ZSB2. On the whole, co-inoculated treatments revealed enhanced microbial activities and caused significant positive shifts in the bacterial diversity and abundance compared to treatments with sole application of ZSB2 or AM.

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