Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4392278 European Journal of Soil Biology 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The iron-ore deposits in Minas Gerais state are concentrated in an area named Ferruginosous Quadrilateral, in which the dominant vegetation belongs to the Cerrado biome (savanna type, called campo rupestre or rupestrian field). This vegetation occurs in altitudes higher than 1000 m and is one of the most endangered biomes of the world. This study aimed to restore an area of rupestrian field used to keep iron-ore products, in which vegetation had been cut and thus resilience did not occur, worsening the low fertility of the fragile soil. Therefore, a revegetation model was proposed using two native species, Centrosema coriaceum (Leguminosae) and Tibouchina multiflora (Melastomataceae), inoculated with selected strains of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and/or a rhizobium strain. After 48 months of plantation, the plant growth, survival index, physical and chemical soil properties, leaf nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P), and P soil were evaluated. Inoculated plants benefited in all the analyzed aspects. While T. multiflora presented increased P content in leaves and soil rhizosphere only in inoculated plants, C. coriaceum showed the highest P content in both leaves and soil independently of inoculation. Although the inoculated plants presented more intense root colonization (AMF), the same mycorrhizal species were found in both inoculated and non-inoculated plants of C. coriaceum and T. multiflora. However, species of the Gigasporaceae family were favored in the C. coriaceum rhizosphere, as compared with T. multiflora. In addition, C. coriaceum was able to select in its rhizosphere a rhizobia strain efficient in P solubilization and a large and efficient population of phosphorus solubilizing microorganisms (PSM), preferentially composed of fungi. Through the similarity of their Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) sequences, the PSM fungi were identified as Fusarium oxysporum and Aspergillus fischeri using the BLAST database. The data presented suggest that C. coriaceum showed a strong rhizosphere effect in favor of a tripartite action of rhizobia, fungi and AMF populations as strategies to solubilize soil phosphate for survival and plant growth in the rupestrian field. Therefore, the inoculation of these microorganisms is desirable for mine recover.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Soil Science
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