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Comparative Study
. 1977 Sep;23(9):1118-22.
doi: 10.1139/m77-167.

Comparison of colony morphology, salt tolerance, and effectiveness in Rhizobium japonicum

Comparative Study

Comparison of colony morphology, salt tolerance, and effectiveness in Rhizobium japonicum

R G Upchurch et al. Can J Microbiol. 1977 Sep.

Abstract

Four strains of Rhizobium japonicum, two of which produce slimy and non-slimy colony types and two others which produce large and small colony types, were isolated and cloned. All were infective and nodulated Lee soybean host plants. Each colony type was characterized as to its salt sensitivity to Na+ and K+ ions, relative level of symbiotic nitrogen fixation, and relative level of free-living nitrogen fixation. Growth studies performed in the presence of salts demonstrated that the non-slimy or small colony types were sensitive to salt with significantly depressed growth rates and cell yields. Growth rates and cell yields of slimy, large, colony types were relatively unaffected by salt. Both symbiotic and free-living (non-associative) nitrogen fixation analyses (by acetylene reduction) revealed that the non-slimy, small colonies were significantly more effective than slimy, large colonies.

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