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Journal ArticleDOI

Diversity of Rhizobium-Phaseolus vulgaris symbiosis: overview and perspectives

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TLDR
In some areas of Latin America, inoculation which normally promotes nodulation and nitrogen fixation is hampered by the prevalence of native strains such as R. etli and R. giardinii as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) has become a cosmopolitan crop, but was originally domesticated in the Americas and has been grown in Latin America for several thousand years. Consequently an enormous diversity of bean nodulating bacteria have developed and in the centers of origin the predominant species in bean nodules is R. etli. In some areas of Latin America, inoculation, which normally promotes nodulation and nitrogen fixation is hampered by the prevalence of native strains. Many other species in addition to R. etli have been found in bean nodules in regions where bean has been introduced. Some of these species such as R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli, R. gallicum bv. phaseoli and R. giardinii bv. phaseoli might have arisen by acquiring the phaseoli plasmid from R. etli. Others, like R. tropici, are well adapted to acid soils and high temperatures and are good inoculants for bean under these conditions. The large number of rhizobia species capable of nodulating bean supports that bean is a promiscuous host and a diversity of bean-rhizobia interactions exists. Large ranges of dinitrogen fixing capabilities have been documented among bean cultivars and commercial beans have the lowest values among legume crops. Knowledge on bean symbiosis is still incipient but could help to improve bean biological nitrogen fixation.

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Citations
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Living in a fungal world: impact of fungi on soil bacterial niche development⋆

TL;DR: The emergence of fungi in terrestrial ecosystems must have had a strong impact on the evolution of terrestrial bacteria, and niche differentiation between soil bacteria and fungi involved in the decomposition of plant-derived organic matter is focused on.
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Progressive Nitrogen Limitation of Ecosystem Responses to Rising Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a new framework that centers on the concept of progressive N limitation (PNL) for studying the interactions between C and N in terrestrial ecosystems, and examined conditions under which PNL may or may not constrain net primary production and carbon sequestration in terrestrial ecosystem.
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A review on phytoremediation of heavy metals and utilization of its byproducts.

TL;DR: The mobility, bioavaliability and plant response to presence of soil heavy metals, classifies the plants according to phytoextraction mechanism and discusses the pathway of metal in plants.
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Soil biota, ecosystem services and land productivity

TL;DR: In this paper, the linkages of soil organisms and ecosystem services essential to life on earth as well as with those associated with the provision of goods and the regulation of ecosystem processes are discussed.
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Soil factors associated with zinc deficiency in crops and humans

TL;DR: Zinc deficiency is the most ubiquitous micronutrient deficiency problem in world crops and wheat grown on calcareous soils and lowland rice on flooded soils are also highly prone to Zn deficiency.
References
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Book

Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology

TL;DR: BCL3 and Sheehy cite Bergey's manual of determinative bacteriology of which systematic bacteriology, first edition, is an expansion.
Book

Functional analysis

Walter Rudin
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Basis of Symbiotic Promiscuity

TL;DR: It is suggested that restricted host ranges are limited to specific niches and represent specialization of widespread and more ancestral promiscuous symbioses.
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Rhizobium Lipo-Chitooligosaccharide Nodulation Factors: Signaling Molecules Mediating Recognition and Morphogenesis

TL;DR: This review summarizes the current knowledge on the biosynthesis, structure, and function of this new class of signaling molecules and discusses the possibility that these signals could be part of a new family of plant lipo-chitooligosaccharide growth regulators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Races of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris, Fabaceae)

TL;DR: Multivariate statistical analyses of morphological, agronomic, and molecular data, as well as other available information on Latin American landraces representing various geographical and ecological regions of their primary centers of domestications in the Americas, reveal the existence of two major groups of germplasm: Middle American and Andean South American, which could be further divided into six races.