info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Protocol for the Quality Control of Azospirillum spp. Inoculants
Fecha
2015Registro en:
Cassan, Fabricio Dario; Penna, Claudio; Creus, Cecilia Mónica; Radovanicich, Débora; Monteleone, Emilia; et al.; Protocol for the Quality Control of Azospirillum spp. Inoculants; Springer; 2015; 487-499
978-331906542-7
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Cassan, Fabricio Dario
Penna, Claudio
Creus, Cecilia Mónica
Radovanicich, Débora
Monteleone, Emilia
García de Salamone, Inés
Di Salvo, Luciana Paula
Mentel, Maria Isabel
García, Julia
Pasarello Mayans, María del Carmen
Lett, Lina Analía Carola
Puente, Mariana Laura
Correa, Olga Susana
Punschke Valerio, Karina
Massa, Rosana
Catafesta, Melina
Rossi, Alejandro Marcelo
Díaz, Marisa
Righes, SIlvia
Carletti, Susana Margarita
Rodríguez Cáceres, Enrique
Resumen
Azospirillum has been one of the most studied genera of plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) worldwide over the past 50 years. The use of these microorganisms in agriculture practices has been adopted due to their ability to associate in rhizospheric, epiphytic, or endophytic ways with roots and promote whole plant growth or crop productivity. The biological treatment of seeds (inoculation) in more than a hundred species of economic or ecological interest has become a common practice in many countries. In Argentina, the Az39 strain of Azospirillum brasilense, belonging to the Culture Collection of the Instituto de Microbiologí-a y Zoologí-a Agrí-cola (IMYZA) of INTA Castelar, was selected in the 1980s after an intensive program to isolate and identify microorganisms for agriculture, according to their agronomic behavior. Since then, its ability to cover the premise for which it was selected has determined that Az39 is largely adopted by inoculant companies in Argentina with the aim of producing biological products for the treatment of several crops. In this chapter, those methods developed and standardized by the network Red de Control de Calidad de Inoculantes (REDCAI) of the Asociación Argentina de Microbiologí-a (AAM) have been adapted as a guide for the quantification of Azospirillum spp. and the detection of contaminating microorganisms in biological products, as two of the most basic and important quality control parameters of inoculants.