Growth and nitrogen fixation activity of soybeans in the presence of bean pod mottle virus
1987
Orellana, R.G. (Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville, Md. (USA)) | Reynolds, S.L. | Berkum, P. van
Pathological and physiological response associated with the host-microsymbiont interaction of soybeans (Glycine max 'Franklin', 'Dyer', 'Centennial', 'Marshall', 'Williams', 'Bedford', and 'Peking'), which were nodulated with Rhizobium japonicum (USDA strain 3I1b-110) and inoculated with bean pod mottle virus (BPMV) in the greenhouse, varied with the cultivar and the substrate in which the plants were grown. In plants grown in a soil mixture, the virus significantly reduced canopy growth, nodulation, total N, and ureide-N content of most cultivars but symbiotic N2 fixation was significantly reduced only for 'Centennial' and 'Peking'. In vermiculite, in which the plants depended almost exclusively on symbiotically fixed N2 the virus reduced canopy and nodule mass of some cultivars but these reductions were significant only for 'Franklin'. In plants grown in this substrate, however, the virus had little effect as increases or decreases in measured components of symbiotic N metabolism were nonsignificant except for the increase in leaf ureides in 'Marshall'. Results suggest that in either soil or vermiculite the symbiotic process in certain soybean cultivars can function at nearly a normal level despite root nodule infection with this virus
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