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- Title
Effect of Herbicide-Resistant Oil-Degrading Bacteria on Plants in Soil Contaminated with Oil and Herbicides.
- Authors
Korshunova, Tatyana; Kuzina, Elena; Mukhamatdyarova, Svetlana; Iskuzhina, Milyausha; Kulbaeva, Liliya; Petrova, Svetlana
- Abstract
Biological remediation of agricultural soils contaminated with oil is complicated by the presence of residual amounts of chemical plant protection products, in particular, herbicides, which, like oil, negatively affect the soil microbiome and plants. In this work, we studied five strains of bacteria of the genera Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter, which exhibited a high degree of oil biodegradation (72–96%). All strains showed resistance to herbicides based on 2,4-D, imazethapyr and tribenuron-methyl, the ability to fix nitrogen, phosphate mobilization, and production of indole-3-acetic acid. The presence of pollutants affected the growth-stimulating properties of bacteria in different ways. The most promising strain P. citronellolis N2 was used alone and together with oat and lupine plants for soil remediation of oil, including herbicide-treated oil-contaminated soil. Combined contamination was more toxic to plants and soil microorganisms. Bacterization stimulated the formation of chlorophyll and suppressed the synthesis of abscisic acid and malonic dialdehyde in plant tissues. The combined use of bacteria and oat plants most effectively reduced the content of hydrocarbons in the soil (including in the presence of herbicides). The results obtained can be used to develop new methods for bioremediation of soils with polychemical pollution.
- Subjects
HERBICIDE resistance; PLANT products; SOIL remediation; PHYTOCHEMICALS; SOIL microbiology; HERBICIDES
- Publication
Plants (2223-7747), 2024, Vol 13, Issue 24, p3560
- ISSN
2223-7747
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.3390/plants13243560