Effect of rhizobium and rhizosphere extract on in-vitro regenerated plantlets of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)
KrishiKosh
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Title |
Effect of rhizobium and rhizosphere extract on in-vitro regenerated plantlets of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)
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Creator |
Manjeet Kumar
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Contributor |
Sikka, V. K.
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Subject |
Chickpea, Regeneration, Rhizobium, Transplantation, Plant growth promotion
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Description |
Experiments were conducted to improve transplantation efficiency of in-vitro regenerated plantlets of chickpea. Three chickpea cultivars C 235, HC 5 and HC 1 were cultured for shoot regeneration and subsequently for root regeneration. A total of five Rhizobium strains were screened for IAA production out of which Strain M 113 was found to secrete maximum IAA (2.4 μg/ml) whereas strain M 25 showed a maximum IAA level of 2.2 (μg/ml) in culture. Rhizobium supplemented culture medium helped in better survival of transplanted explants in comparison to regenerated plantlets on normal control medium. Rhizobium consortium treatment and adding Rhizobium culture over roots did not help in rooting and survival of the regenerants. Instead of it adding culture extract in the rooting medium with MS salts helped a lot in improving survival. Among MRC 113, MRC 25 and MRC 104 varietal response shown was maximum in cultivar C235 where it was 90% and it was minimum in cultivar HC 1 where it was 66%. In MRC 113, MRC 25 and MRC 104 no growth hormones were added but only Rhizobium culture was added showing that culture is having plant growth promotion abilities, which may be due to phytohormone IAA production in culture. Cultivar C 235 gave better response in comparison to other cultivars on MRC 113 proving that Rhizobium strain 113 is best plant growth promoting among these strains. In medium MSE no rooting hormones were added but still it showed good rooting quality showing that rhizosphere extract may also promote root development and hence rooting quality. Rhizobia proved promising in improving survival of regenerated chickpea. This line of treatment needs to be further refined to enable seed set in the regenerated plants. Other plant growth promoting microbes in combination with Rhizobium inoculation are further expected to improve the response. |
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Date |
2016-11-23T08:51:36Z
2016-11-23T08:51:36Z 2007 |
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Type |
Thesis
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Identifier |
http://krishikosh.egranth.ac.in/handle/1/87144
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Language |
en
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Format |
application/pdf
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Publisher |
CCSHAU
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