Microbial Inoculants on Woody Legumes to Recover a Municipal Landfill Site

Tree and shrubby legumes have great potential in degraded land rehabilitation because of their ability to form symbiotic associations with nitrogen fixing rhizobia and mycorrhizal fungi. Extensive soil disturbance reduces natural microbial propagules thus preventing the formation of beneficial plant...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water, air & soil pollution: Focus air & soil pollution: Focus, 2003-01, Vol.3 (3), p.189-199
Hauptverfasser: Quatrini, P, Scaglione, G, Incannella, G, Badalucco, L, Puglia, A M, La Mantia, T
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container_end_page 199
container_issue 3
container_start_page 189
container_title Water, air & soil pollution: Focus
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creator Quatrini, P
Scaglione, G
Incannella, G
Badalucco, L
Puglia, A M
La Mantia, T
description Tree and shrubby legumes have great potential in degraded land rehabilitation because of their ability to form symbiotic associations with nitrogen fixing rhizobia and mycorrhizal fungi. Extensive soil disturbance reduces natural microbial propagules thus preventing the formation of beneficial plant-microbes symbiosis. Reintroduction of selected microbial symbionts may improve the recovery rate of disturbed ecosystems. We inoculated selected rhizobia and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on two woody legume species, the mediterranean shrub Spartium junceum L. and the exotic tree Acacia cyanophylla Lindl. in order to recover a sealed municipal landfill (Palermo, Sicily, Italy). Inoculated plants showed shoot growth parameters 2 to 12-fold higher than uninoculated plants. After transplanting on the municipal landfill site, inoculated plants showed no transplant shock and low mortality (6-15%). The chemical analysis of P and N plant content showed no differences between inoculated and uninoculated plants suggesting that a dilution effect occurred due to higher biomass production of the inoculated plants. The beneficial effects of mycorrhization and rhizobium inoculum on growth parameters were still detectable one year after transplanting in S. junceum.
doi_str_mv 10.1023/A:1023953012021
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source Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Acacia cyanophylla
Bacteria
Rhizobium
Spartium junceum
title Microbial Inoculants on Woody Legumes to Recover a Municipal Landfill Site
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