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The Effect of Plant Growth Promoting Bacteria on Transplants Growth and Lettuce Yield in Organic Production Cover

The Effect of Plant Growth Promoting Bacteria on Transplants Growth and Lettuce Yield in Organic Production

Open Access
|Dec 2016

Abstract

Application of beneficial bacterial strain B125 (Enterobacter sp.) and strain PZ9 (Bacillus sp.) in lettuce transplants production significantly enhanced seed germination and plant biomass. The best effect was obtained when the mixture of B125 and PZ9 was used. Combined application of these bacteria significantly increased transplants biomass, which was about 45% higher than that in the control. However, after planting these transplants in organic field, generally, there were no differences in yield and nutrient content in plants treated and not treated with the bacteria, except for nitrogen and vitamin C. The lettuce grown from transplants treated with bacterial mixture B125 + PZ9 contained significantly higher nitrogen than plants from other treatments. Opposite to nitrogen, bacterial applications decreased the amount of vitamin C. The growth and organic lettuce composition was affected by planting time. The yield was higher in spring, but the concentration of nutrients in these plants was lower than that in plants harvested in autumn. Climatic and light conditions in the late season were the reasons for increased dry matter content, minerals, phenolic compounds, and vitamin C, as well as high concentration of nitrates.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/johr-2016-0026 | Journal eISSN: 2353-3978 | Journal ISSN: 2300-5009
Language: English
Page range: 101 - 107
Submitted on: Jun 1, 2016
Accepted on: Nov 1, 2016
Published on: Dec 30, 2016
Published by: National Institute of Horticultural Research
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2016 Magdalena Szczech, Anna Szafirowska, Waldemar Kowalczyk, Justyna Szwejda-Grzybowska, Agnieszka Włodarek, Robert Maciorowski, published by National Institute of Horticultural Research
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.