Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnata

Nitrogen is one of the most important nutrients required by plants as a major component of all nucleic acids and proteins such as enzymes which control and enable their growth and reproduction. While much research has been conducted on the legume tree Pongamia (a candidate source for renewable biofu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Phoebe N. Calica
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Agronomy and Horticulture 2017-02-01
Series:Journal of Tropical Crop Science
Online Access:https://j-tropical-crops.com/index.php/agro/article/view/125
id doaj-57b48c7c034b4125b5c20ce9fa8241e8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-57b48c7c034b4125b5c20ce9fa8241e82020-11-25T03:26:00ZengDepartment of Agronomy and HorticultureJournal of Tropical Crop Science2356-01692356-01772017-02-014111210.29244/jtcs.4.1.1-12125Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnataPhoebe N. Calica0University of Southeastern PhilippinesNitrogen is one of the most important nutrients required by plants as a major component of all nucleic acids and proteins such as enzymes which control and enable their growth and reproduction. While much research has been conducted on the legume tree Pongamia (a candidate source for renewable biofuel), there is only a handful of studies on the mechanisms and regulation of nitrogen fixation, which is considered as one of the most important domestication traits that needs to be investigated.  Steps to optimize the symbiotic nitrogen fixation of Pongamia is, firstly, to select the best rhizobial isolates as inoculum among the naturally-occurring pool of bacteria in soils across Queensland. There have been reports on rhizobia nodulating Pongamia isolated from Western Australia and India but not in Queensland, Australia. This study is the first to report such rhizobia isolates that nodulated Pongamia.  Secondly, is to establish efficient nodulation by studying the factors such as nitrate and salinity. The published literature has provided extensive details on the effects of these factors in nodulation and their mechanisms in various legumes. However, only one preliminary study was published from our laboratory; the present study is the in-depth continuation of that effort. Lastly, nitrogen fixation in Pongamia must be assessed to determine if fixed nitrogen is sufficient to support its growth and reproduction. Acetylene reduction assay is the simplest and most common method of assessing fixed nitrogen but in this research, different methods were explored in order to compare both qualitative and quantitative results. This review summarises the current knowledge related to Pongamia, rhizobia, nodulation and nitrogen fixation.https://j-tropical-crops.com/index.php/agro/article/view/125
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Phoebe N. Calica
spellingShingle Phoebe N. Calica
Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnata
Journal of Tropical Crop Science
author_facet Phoebe N. Calica
author_sort Phoebe N. Calica
title Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnata
title_short Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnata
title_full Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnata
title_fullStr Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnata
title_full_unstemmed Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation of Pongamia pinnata
title_sort nodulation and nitrogen fixation of pongamia pinnata
publisher Department of Agronomy and Horticulture
series Journal of Tropical Crop Science
issn 2356-0169
2356-0177
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Nitrogen is one of the most important nutrients required by plants as a major component of all nucleic acids and proteins such as enzymes which control and enable their growth and reproduction. While much research has been conducted on the legume tree Pongamia (a candidate source for renewable biofuel), there is only a handful of studies on the mechanisms and regulation of nitrogen fixation, which is considered as one of the most important domestication traits that needs to be investigated.  Steps to optimize the symbiotic nitrogen fixation of Pongamia is, firstly, to select the best rhizobial isolates as inoculum among the naturally-occurring pool of bacteria in soils across Queensland. There have been reports on rhizobia nodulating Pongamia isolated from Western Australia and India but not in Queensland, Australia. This study is the first to report such rhizobia isolates that nodulated Pongamia.  Secondly, is to establish efficient nodulation by studying the factors such as nitrate and salinity. The published literature has provided extensive details on the effects of these factors in nodulation and their mechanisms in various legumes. However, only one preliminary study was published from our laboratory; the present study is the in-depth continuation of that effort. Lastly, nitrogen fixation in Pongamia must be assessed to determine if fixed nitrogen is sufficient to support its growth and reproduction. Acetylene reduction assay is the simplest and most common method of assessing fixed nitrogen but in this research, different methods were explored in order to compare both qualitative and quantitative results. This review summarises the current knowledge related to Pongamia, rhizobia, nodulation and nitrogen fixation.
url https://j-tropical-crops.com/index.php/agro/article/view/125
work_keys_str_mv AT phoebencalica nodulationandnitrogenfixationofpongamiapinnata
_version_ 1724594426896973824