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Phytomanagement of Cd-contaminated soils using maize (Zea mays L.) assisted by plant growth-promoting rhizobacteri
Publication . Moreira, Helena; Marques, Ana P. G. C.; Franco, Albina R.; Rangel, António O. S. S.; Castro, Paula M. L.
Zea mays (L.) is a crop widely cultivated throughout the world and can be considered suitable for phytomanagement due to its metal resistance and energetic value. In this study, the effect of two plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria, Ralstonia eutropha and Chryseobacterium humi, on growth and metal uptake of Z. mays plants in soils contaminated with up to 30 mg Cd kg−1 was evaluated. Bacterial inoculation increased plant biomass up to 63 % and led to a decrease of up to 81 % in Cd shoot levels (4–88 mg Cd kg−1) and to an increase of up to 186 % in accumulation in the roots (52–134 mg Cd kg−1). The rhizosphere community structure changed throughout the experiment and varied with different levels of Cd soil contamination, as revealed by molecular biology techniques. Z. mays plants inoculated with either of the tested strains may have potential application in a strategy of soil remediation, in particular short-term phytostabilization, coupled with biomass production for energy purposes.
Metal(loid)-contaminated soils as a source of culturable heterotrophic aerobic bacteria for remediation applications
Publication . Pires, Carlos; Franco, Albina R.; Pereira, Sofia I. A.; Henriques, Isabel; Correia, António; Magan, Naresh; Castro, Paula M. L.
Heavy metal-contaminated soils are a serious environmental problem. Herein, the culturable heterotrophic bacterial community present on two metal(loid)-contaminated sites in the Northern Portugal was investigated. The bacterial counts ranged from 5.96 to 7.69 and 7.04 to 7.51 (log CFUg(-1) soil) in Sites 1 and 3, respectively. The bacterial population was predominantly composed of Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria on both sites. The most represented genera in Site 1 were Bacillus (41%) and Pseudomonas (27%), whereas Arthrobacter (21%) and Pseudomonas (13%) were the most represented genera in Site 3. Several bacterial isolates showed tolerance to high concentrations of metal(loid)s, suggesting that both contaminated sites are a valuable source of metal(loid)-tolerant bacteria, which may be further used in bioremediation and/or phytoremediation processes.
The response of Betula pubescens to inoculation with an ectomycorrhizal fungus and a plant growth promoting bacterium is substrate-dependent
Publication . Sousa, Nadine R.; Franco, Albina R.; Ramos, Miguel A.; Oliveira, Rui S.; Castro, Paula M. L.
The combination of ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi and plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB) has considerable potential in forestry. Here we report on the combined effects of PGPB Mesorhizobium sp. and the ECM fungus Paxillus involutus on the growth of Betula pubescens in two different substrates, a forest soil and an alkaline anthropogenic sediment. Growth, nutrient concentration and mycorrhizal formation of B. pubescens were determined at the end of the experiment and the fungal and bacterial communities were assessed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. The combined effects of ECM and PGPB enhanced root and shoot growth most in the forest soil with Mesorhizobium appearing to stimulate mycorrhizal formation. However, in the alkaline sediment, an antagonistic interaction was detected between P. involutus and Mesorhizobium sp., with Mesorhizobium sp. alone stimulating growth. The significant interaction between the ECM and the PGBP across the two substrates is discussed.
Effect of benfluralin on Pinus pinea seedlings mycorrhized with Pisolithus tinctorius and Suillus bellinii – Study of plant antioxidant response
Publication . Franco, A. R.; Pereira, Sofia I. A.; Castro, Paula
In this study, Pinus pinea seedlings mycorrhized with selected ectomycorrhizal fungi (ECMF), Pisolithus tinctorius and Suillus bellinii, were exposed to the herbicide benfluralin. Non-mycorrhized P. pinea seedlings and seedlings mycorrhized with ECMF were transferred to benfluralin-spiked soils at levels of 0.165, 1.65 and 16.5 mg kg 1. Plant growth and the fungal role on plant antioxidant response were assessed. In the presence of benfluralin, higher plant growth was observed in mycorrhized plants compared to non-mycorrhized plants, but ECMF colonisation and nutrient uptake were affected by the herbicide. Benfluralin showed no effect on lipid peroxidation in P. pinea seedlings. However, seedlings mycorrhized with S. bellinii showed higher levels of lipid peroxidation when compared to non-mycorrhized ones, both in the presence and absence of benfluralin. The increase of lipid peroxidation could be related to seedling growth induced by the fungus and not to benfluralin toxicity. A similar trend was observed in seedlings mycorrhized with P. tinctorius when exposed to higher benfluralin concentrations, suggesting that the antioxidant response to benfluralin is related not only to fungus species, but also to the level of stress applied in the soil. The higher amount of superoxide dismutase activity in P. pinea seedlings tissues exposed to benfluralin could indicate a plant adaptative response to benfluralin toxicity. Catalase activity showed no increase with benfluralin exposure. Pre-established P. tinctorius mycorrhization conferred root protection and enhanced plant growth in benfluralin spiked soil, inferring that P. tinctorius – P. pinea association could advantageous for plant growth in soils contaminated with pesticides
Inoculating Helianthus annuus (sunflower) grown in zinc and cadmium contaminated soils with plant growth promoting bacteria – Effects on phytoremediation strategies
Publication . Marques, Ana P. G. C.; Moreira, Helena; Franco, Albina R.; Rangel, António O. S. S.; Catro, Paula, M. L.
Plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPR) may help reducing the toxicity of heavy metals to plants in polluted environments. In this work the effects of inoculating metal resistant and plant growth promoting bacterial strains on the growth of Helianthus annuus grown in Zn and Cd spiked soils were assessed. The PGPR strains Ralstonia eutropha (B1) and Chrysiobacterium humi (B2) reduced losses of weight in metal exposed plants and induced changes in metal bioaccumulation and bioconcentration - with strain B2 decreasing up to 67% Zn accumulation and by 20% Zn bioconcentration factor (BCF) in the shoots, up to 64% Zn uptake and 38% Zn BCF in the roots, and up to 27% Cd uptake and 27% Cd BCF in plant roots. The impact of inoculation on the bacterial communities in the rhizosphere of the plant was also assessed. Bacterial community diversity decreased with increasing levels of metal contamination in the soil, but in rhizosphere soil of plants inoculated with the PGPR strains, a higher bacterial diversity was kept throughout the experimental period. Inoculation of sunflower, particularly with C humi (B2), appears to be an effective way of enhancing the short term stabilization potential of the plant in metal contaminated land, lowering losses in plant biomass and decreasing aboveground tissue contamination.

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Funding agency

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

Funding programme

SFRH

Funding Award Number

SFRH/BD/47722/2008

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