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      Biological nitrogen fixation associated with sugar cane and rice: Contributions and prospects for improvement

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      Plant and Soil
      Springer Nature

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          Infection of sugar cane by the nitrogen-fixing bacteriumAcetobacter diazotrophicus

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            Improved methodology for isolation of Acetobacter diazotrophicus and confirmation of its endophytic habitat.

            Nitrogen-free, semi-solid defined medium with crystallized cane sugar (100 g/l) supplemented with cane juice (5 ml/l) was the most selective for isolating Acetobacter diazotrophicus. Surveys of A. diazotrophicus using this medium showed that >10(3) cells/g fresh wt were present at all sites in all parts of the sugar cane plant and in all trash samples examined, reaching up to 10(7)/g. Additional samples, from forage grasses and cereals and from weed species collected within the sugar cane fields, were all negative. Heat treatment (50°C for 30 min) of the sugar cane setts did not affect A. diazotrophicus numbers within the plant. Nitrogenase activity of intact soil-plant systems in pots planted with heat-treated setts did not respond to inoculation with A. diazotrophicus. The endophytic habitat of this diazotroph and its propagation within the stem cuttings was confirmed.
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              Host-plant specificity in the infection of cereals with Azospirillum spp

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Plant and Soil
                Plant Soil
                Springer Nature
                0032-079X
                1573-5036
                July 1995
                July 1995
                : 174
                : 1-2
                : 195-209
                Article
                10.1007/BF00032247
                8767e4ca-4248-44e2-886a-cfdbc2ece9c6
                © 1995
                History

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