We inoculated lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia (Dougl.) Engelm.) with Paenibacillus polymyxa P2b-2R, a diazotrophic bacterium previously isolated from internal stem tissue of a naturally regenerating pine seedling to evaluate biological nitrogen fixation and seedling growth promotion by this microorganism. Seedlings generated from pine seed inoculated with strain P2b-2R were grown for up to 13 months in a N-limited soil mix containing 0.7 mM available N labeled as Ca((15)NO3)2 to facilitate detection of N2-fixation. Strain P2b-2R developed a persistent endophytic population comprising 10(2)-10(6) cfu g(-1) plant tissue inside pine roots, stems, and needles during the experiment. At the end of the growth period, P2b-2R had reduced seedling mortality by 14 % and (15)N foliar N abundance 79 % and doubled foliar N concentration and seedling biomass compared to controls. Our results suggest that N2-fixation by P. polymyxa enhanced growth of pine seedlings and support the hypothesis that plant-associated diazotrophs capable of endophytic colonization can satisfy a significant proportion of the N required by tree seedlings growing under N-limited conditions.
Lodgepole pine ( Pinus contorta var. latifolia Engelm. ex S. Watson) and western red cedar ( Thuja plicata Donn ex D. Don) are capable of growing in soils that are severely nitrogen-limited. A rarely evaluated but possible nitrogen source for gymnosperms growing at nutrient poor sites is nitrogen fixation by endophytic bacteria. To investigate this possibility, we looked for nitrogen-fixing bacteria in surface-sterilized needle, stem, and root tissues of naturally regenerating lodgepole pine and western red cedar seedlings (2–4 years old) and trees (>20 years old) growing near Williams Lake, Chilliwack Lake, and Boston Bar, British Columbia, Canada. Ninety-nine bacterial isolates were obtained by plating surface-sterilized plant tissue extracts on tryptic soy agar (TSA) and combined carbon medium agar (CCMA), a nitrogen-free medium. Bacterial isolates were identified using gas chromatographic fatty acid methyl ester (GC-FAME) and 16S rRNA gene analyses and were evaluated for nitrogenase activity using an acetylene reduction assay. Representatives of the genera Bacillus and Paenibacillus dominated the culturable endophytic bacterial community in tissues of both tree species, with three Paenibacillus isolates and one Dyadobacter fermentans strain demonstrating consistently high acetylene-reduction activities. Our results raise the possibility that endophytic nitrogen fixation provides a supplementary nitrogen source for naturally regenerated lodgepole pine and western red cedar.
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