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A survey for plant-growth-promoting rhizo-bacteria and symbionts associated with crop plants in the Okavango region of Southern Africa.

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Title
Title A survey for plant-growth-promoting rhizo-bacteria and symbionts associated with crop plants in the Okavango region of Southern Africa. ?
Author Grönemeyer, JL., Berkelmann, D., Mubyana-John, T., Haiyambo, D., Chimwamurombe, P., Kasaona, B., Hurek, T., & Reinhold-Hurek, B. ?
Abstract Regions in the Okavango catchment and delta such as highlands of Angola, the Kavango region of Namibia, and the Okavango Delta region of Botswana, although rich in plant diversity and density, have not produced significant yields when cropped by small scale farmers in the region. This phenomenon may be due to many factors among which is low nitrogen and other crop nutrients availability. This region due to its richness in flora may harbour bacteria which play a major role in plant nutrient availability. However, some of these rhizobacteria can be isolated and re-inoculated on crop plants to improve crop yields. Thus a survey on root nodulation of local pulses such as Vigna unguiculata, V. subterranea, and Phaseolus vulgaris, in the Chitembo area of Angola and the Kavango region of Namibia was carried out. Nodulated plants and putatively symbiotic bacteria were detected from a range of sites for all species. In Namibia, isolation of putative plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPRs) was done on cereal crops and from other indigenous plants on farmland and from pristine areas. In Botswana, phosphate solubilizing bacteria were isolated from the roots of grasses in the floodplains and assayed for their ability to solubilize soil phosphate with the intention of using them to increase yields in sorghum (Sorghum vulgare). In total, 46 bacterial strains were isolated from nodules of legumes from Namibia, while 37 strains were isolated from Angola. Additionally, 32 strains of plant associated rhizobacteria were obtained from cereals or natural plants from the Kavango region in Namibia, and further ten isolates were selected from the Seronga region in Botswana. The large number of bacteria generated by this survey may contain some bacteria that may promote plant growth and improve soil fertility ?
Citation Grönemeyer, JL., Berkelmann, D., Mubyana-John, T., Haiyambo, D., Chimwamurombe, P., Kasaona, B., Hurek, T., & Reinhold-Hurek, B. (2013): A survey for plant-growth-promoting rhizo-bacteria and symbionts associated with crop plants in the Okavango region of Southern Africa. Biodiversity and Ecology Vol.5 pp.287-294 ref.21 ?
DOI DOI : 10.7809/b-e.00282 ?
Dataset
Document Reference Date Type publication ?
Date 2013-12-19 ?
Language English ?
Online Linkage ?
Associated project SASSCAL, TFO - The Future Okavango ?
Subproject 044 Food security: Improved cultivation of pulses ?
Dataset Classification
Type PDF ?
Category publication ?
Metadata
Metadata Contact Person Barbara Reinhold-Hurek ?
Metadata Date Stamp 2020-08-12 ?
Identifier
Internal identifier sdp_doc_documents_6943 (Link)