1999
DOI: 10.1016/s1161-0301(99)00029-5
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Plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria and kinetin as ways to promote corn growth and yield in a short-growing-season area

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Cited by 52 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Roesch et al [15] used molecular tools to assess diazotrophic bacterial diversity within rhizosphere soils, roots, and stems of field-grown maize and observed a predominance of α-proteobacteria and β-proteobacteria sequences in the rhizosphere soil and stem samples; Herbaspirillum was one of the dominant genera in the interiors of maize plants but was rarer in soil. The members of this genus have been tested in the formulation of biofertilizers, with variable success in field crop trials ( [16][17][18][19] and references therein [20][21][22][23]). The whole genome sequence of H. seropedicae has been published [24].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Roesch et al [15] used molecular tools to assess diazotrophic bacterial diversity within rhizosphere soils, roots, and stems of field-grown maize and observed a predominance of α-proteobacteria and β-proteobacteria sequences in the rhizosphere soil and stem samples; Herbaspirillum was one of the dominant genera in the interiors of maize plants but was rarer in soil. The members of this genus have been tested in the formulation of biofertilizers, with variable success in field crop trials ( [16][17][18][19] and references therein [20][21][22][23]). The whole genome sequence of H. seropedicae has been published [24].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Significant increases in growth and yield of agronomically important crops in response to inoculation with PGPR have been reported many times (Kloepper et al, 1980;Chen et al, 1994;Zhang et al, 1996;Amara and Dahdoh, 1997;Chanway, 1998;Pan et al, 1999;Bin et al, 2000;Biswas et al, 2000;Asghar et al, 2002;Vessey, 2003;Silva et al, 2006). PGPR beneficial effects have been exploited in many areas including biofertilizers, microbial rhizoremediation and biopesticides (Adesemoye et al, 2008) …”
Section: Plant Growth-promoting Rhizobacteria (Pgpr)mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…En un estudio similar Yau et al (2013) encontraron incrementos en altura, diámetro, número de hojas, biomasa seca y área foliar por efecto de la inoculación de S. marcescens y Bacillus cereus en plantas de chile, debido a que estos microorganismos tienen la capacidad de producir acido indolacético e inhibir fitopatógenos como P. capsicí hasta en un 75 %. En otros trabajos se han encontrado efectos benéfi-cos al inocular S. liquefaciens en cultivos de trigo (Abaid-Ullah et al 2015), tomate (Manas et al 2010), soya (Pan et al 2002) y maíz (Pan et al 1999 Serratia plymuthica es una bacteria ubicua Gram negativa que se ha aislado en rizósfera de plantas de todo el mundo, ya sea en vida libre o como organismo endófito (De Vleesschauwer y Hofte 2007) y tiene potencial no sólo para suprimir los agentes patógenos del suelo, sino también para estimular el crecimiento vegetal mediante la exudación de sideróforos, producción de acido indol acético, creación de películas protectoras de la rizósfera y biosíntesis de quitinasas y proteasas (Muller et al 2009). Sus efectos benéficos como rizobacteria promotora del crecimiento han sido evaluados en plantas de papa (Czajkowski et al 2012), pepino (McCullagh et al 1996, algodón, frijol, manzana, arroz, naranja, lechuga, fresa (De Vleesschauwer y Hofte 2007) y chile (Shen et al 2006, Kim et al 2008, Cao et al 2009), encontrándose incrementos en altura, biomasa radical y foliar y rendimiento de fruto en el cultivo.…”
Section: Efectividad De Las Rizobacterias En La Promoción Del Crecimiunclassified