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Periódicos Brasileiros em Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia

Phosphatesolubilizing fungi coinoculated with Bradyrhizobium promote cowpea growth under varying N and P fertilization conditions

GudiñoGomezjurado, Marco EstebanLeite, Rafael de AlmeidaCarvalho, Teotonio Soares dePfenning, Ludwig HeinrichMoreira, Fatima Maria de Souza

ABSTRACT: We evaluated the compatibility between two nitrogenfixing Bradyrhizobium inoculant strains and phosphatesolubilizing fungal strains and the effect of coinoculation of these bacterial and fungal strains on cowpea growth under different N and P conditions. First, the compatibility between Bradyrhizobium strains UFLA0384 and INPA0311B and fungi Haematonectria ipomoeae FSA381, Eleutherascus lectardii FSA257a, Pochonia chlamydosporia var. catenulata FSA109, and Acremonium polychromum FSA115 was tested in both solid and liquid media. Cowpea growth and nodulation promotion under two mineral N doses and two P conditions (a low dose of soluble P plus a high dose of Ca3(PO4)2 and another condition with a high dose of soluble P) were tested with two N2 fixing Bradyrhizobium strains coinoculated with each of the Psolubilizing fungal strains FSA109, FSA115, and FSA381. There was compatibility between each fungal strain and the two Bradyrhizobium strains, except for FSA257a with either of the bacterial strains in liquid medium. When both mineral N and P were limiting, plants were able to grow and accumulate N and P based on biological N2 fixation and solubilization of calcium phosphate in the same amount as the mineral N and soluble phosphate. Even when both nutrients were fully available, the type of coinoculation promoted plant growth and nutrient accumulation. The responses varied in accordance with the coinoculated strains, the N source, and the P source, reflecting the enormous complexity of the biological interactions between plants and microorganisms, and the nutrient conditions provided by the environment.

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