| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10846181 | Soil Biology and Biochemistry | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Bacterial densities were significantly increased in sick soils. Metabolic activities (Biolog® GN2) and genetic structure, observed through RISA, were also significantly modified in sick soils. Changes in the composition of individual microbial groups in the rhizosphere of peach trees excavated from healthy or sick soil indicated the involvement of rhizobacteria in the etiology of the replant sickness of peach soil. More than 60% of the strains isolated from healthy soils corresponded to Pseudomonas sp. and 58% of the isolates from sick soils were Bacillus sp. This study determined that Bacillus were able to produce in vitro HCN. It also appeared that in sick soil, there was a shift in the structure of bacterial communities with an increase noted in phytotoxic microorganisms capable of producing HCN compounds.
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Authors
E. Benizri, S. Piutti, S. Verger, L. Pagès, G. Vercambre, J.L. Poessel, P. Michelot,
