Diversity of Bradyrhizobia isolated from a wide range of forest legumes native of Guyana and Africa by analysis of partial 16S-23S rDNA intergenic spacer sequencing

Tropical rain forests are characterised by a high diversity of plant species. Only 30% of the trees in the world have been investigated for their capacity of developing nitrogen fixing symbioses and only a limited number of Rhizobium strains from leguminous trees have been isolated and characterised. The rhizobial diversity in Brazil has been recently studied by Moreira el al. (1993, 1998) using partial 16S rDNA gene sequences. We isolated 100 slow-growing bacterial strains from nodules of 7 forest legumes native of Guyana belonging to the genera Andira, Dalbergia, Michaerium, lndigofera, Erythrina, Clitoria and Desmodium, from 17 legumes natives of Guinea belonging to the genera Penthaclethra, Aubrevillea, Mimosa, Desmodium, Piptadenium, Calpogonium, Centrosema, Mucuna, Milieria, Pterocarpus, Erythrina, Abrus, Samanea, Arthrosamanea, Piptadenia and Albizia, and from 7 generes of Madagascar, Dalbergia, Albizia, Desmodium, Crotalaria, Chadsia, Cadia et Mundulea; representing 13 tribes belonging to either of the three subfamilies of the Leguminosae. The isolates were examined by analysis of partial 16S-23S rDNA Intergenic Spacer (IGS) sequences, a technique described by Willems el al. (in press) as a rapid tool to evaluate the diversity of bradyrhizobia isolated from tropical trees.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Munive, Antonio, Fetiharrison, Roland, Le Roux, Christine, Giraud, Eric, De Lajudie, Philippe, Dreyfus, Bernard
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: s.n.
Subjects:P34 - Biologie du sol, F62 - Physiologie végétale - Croissance et développement, P35 - Fertilité du sol, K01 - Foresterie - Considérations générales,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/574286/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/574286/1/document_574286.pdf
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Summary:Tropical rain forests are characterised by a high diversity of plant species. Only 30% of the trees in the world have been investigated for their capacity of developing nitrogen fixing symbioses and only a limited number of Rhizobium strains from leguminous trees have been isolated and characterised. The rhizobial diversity in Brazil has been recently studied by Moreira el al. (1993, 1998) using partial 16S rDNA gene sequences. We isolated 100 slow-growing bacterial strains from nodules of 7 forest legumes native of Guyana belonging to the genera Andira, Dalbergia, Michaerium, lndigofera, Erythrina, Clitoria and Desmodium, from 17 legumes natives of Guinea belonging to the genera Penthaclethra, Aubrevillea, Mimosa, Desmodium, Piptadenium, Calpogonium, Centrosema, Mucuna, Milieria, Pterocarpus, Erythrina, Abrus, Samanea, Arthrosamanea, Piptadenia and Albizia, and from 7 generes of Madagascar, Dalbergia, Albizia, Desmodium, Crotalaria, Chadsia, Cadia et Mundulea; representing 13 tribes belonging to either of the three subfamilies of the Leguminosae. The isolates were examined by analysis of partial 16S-23S rDNA Intergenic Spacer (IGS) sequences, a technique described by Willems el al. (in press) as a rapid tool to evaluate the diversity of bradyrhizobia isolated from tropical trees.