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Isolation and Characterization of Rhizosphere Bacterial Community from cultivated plants in Mahikeng, NorthWest Province, South Africa / Lorato Modise

The rhizosphere is characterized by the presence of high microbial activities which are
influenced by plant root exudates. This study examined bacterial diversity and physiological
functions plants rhizosphere using both culture-dependent and culture-independent techniques of
seven cultivated. Physico-chemical properties of soil samples revealed that the rhizobacteria
adapted well to pH ranging from 7.5 to 9.1. Macronutrients (carbon, nitrogen, calcium,
magnesium, phosphorous, potassium, sodium and iron) had a wide range of concentration
between 0 to 4380.1 mg/kg. Concentrations of metal elements (cadmium, cobalt, chromium,
copper and zinc) from all rhizosphere samples were below the amount of 3.1 mg/kg, indicating
that the samples were free from metal contaminations. Sole carbon substrates utilization of
bacteria in rhizosphere samples were measured as Average Well Colour Development (A WCD)
and Group-wise Average Well Colour Development (AWCDg) patterns. At seventy two hours,
there was no significant difference in AWCD patterns between bacteria in all samples and there
was a significant difference in AWCDg patterns. Biochemical tests showed majority of isolates
had similar physiological properties to members of Bacillus genus. All the bacterial isolates
exhibited positive antifungal trait, fifteen solubilized phosphate and three had cyanide production
traits during in vitro plant growth promotion assays. In vitro plant growth revealed that bacterial
isolate RL1 (Bacillus licheniformis) produced the highest concentration of indole acetic acid
(IAA) at 25 mg/ml. Bacterial isolate RG3 (Bacillus pumilus) had the highest amino cyclopropane
carboxylase (ACC) deaminase activity indicated by the high production of α-ketobutyrate
produced at 4.8 mg/ml. There were significant differences in shoot length at P ≤ 5% level of
significance and there was no significant difference in the number of leaves across all three
inoculated plants at P ≥ 5% level of significance. Sequence and phylogenetic analysis of
identified culture-dependent bacteria revealed a homologous similarity of 94 to 100% between
isolates sequences and GenBank sequences. From this, 81% of the sequences were closely
related to Firmicutes, 13% to Actinobacteria and 6% to Proteobacteria. From cultureindependent
method, only 8 PCR-DGGE bands were detected, the 200 bp sequences in the 16S
rRNA fragment showed 91 to 100% homologous similarity to GenBank sequences. Their 16S
rRNA sequences was closely related to 50% uncultured bacterium clones, 25% Firmicutes, 13%
Proteobacteria and 12% Bacteroidetes sequences. Both culture-dependent and cultureindependent
techniques were precise in the identification and description of bacterial community
in rhizosphere. / Thesis (M.Sc) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2014

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:nwu/oai:dspace.nwu.ac.za:10394/16198
Date January 2014
CreatorsModise, Lorato
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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