Enhancing the early performance of the leguminous shrub Retama sphaerocarpa (L.) Boiss.: fertilisation versus Rhizobium inoculation

We have investigated the effect on growth of fertilisation versus biological nitrogen fixation by rhizobial nodules in Retama sphaerocarpa (L.) Boiss, a leafless leguminous shrub native to the Iberian Peninsula and North-West Africa that has generated interest for revegation of dry Mediterranean hab...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant and soil 2002-03, Vol.240 (2), p.253-262
Hauptverfasser: Valladares, Fernando, Villar-Salvador, Pedro, Domínguez, Susana, Fernández-Pascual, Mercedes, Peñuelas, Juan Luis, Pugnaire, Francisco I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We have investigated the effect on growth of fertilisation versus biological nitrogen fixation by rhizobial nodules in Retama sphaerocarpa (L.) Boiss, a leafless leguminous shrub native to the Iberian Peninsula and North-West Africa that has generated interest for revegation of dry Mediterranean habitats. Our main objective was to optimise the formation of root nodules under nursery conditions and to evaluate their influence on the first year of seedling growth in comparison with standard fertilisation. Seedlings of R. sphaerocarpa from two Spanish localities were grown under two levels of fertilisation. and half of each were inoculated with rhizobia isolated from adult Retama, Cytisus and Adenocarpus plants in the field. Although some promiscuity was observed, nodulation was significantly successful with specific rhizobia. At the end of the experiment, highly fertilised plants were taller and heavier and exhibited larger photosynthetic rates than either nodulated or non-nodulated plants under low fertilisation. High fertilisation enhanced seedling growth but inhibited both the nodulation and the nitrogenase activity of the nodules. Thus, physiological differences between nodulated and non-nodulated plants were observed in the low but not in the high fertilisation treatment. Nitrogen uptake and use was enhanced by root nodules, which translated into enhanced photosynthesis and growth. Since inoculation is simple, environmentally friendly and cheap, and nodulated plants are more likely to overcome transplant stress than non-nodulated ones, our results suggest that inoculation together with low, background fertilisation (instead of high fertilisation) should be used when producing high quality seedlings of this autochthonous Mediterranean shrub.
ISSN:0032-079X
1573-5036
DOI:10.1023/A:1015752320773