Project

Exploration of legume-rhizobia diversity to select symbioses tolerant to water deficit under limiting phosphorus condition, Morocco

Code
13V07818
Duration
01 January 2018 → 31 December 2020
Funding
Federal funding: VLIR-UOS
Research disciplines
  • Natural sciences
    • Bacteriology
    • Microbiomes
    • Plant biology not elsewhere classified
  • Medical and health sciences
    • Bacteriology
  • Agricultural and food sciences
    • Agricultural plant protection
Keywords
grain legumes rhizobia drought stress biological nitrogen fixation
 
Project description

In Mediterranean area, legumes occupy an important place due to their agro-economic and environmental interests. These plants contribute to nitrogen incorporation in ecosystems by symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF) involving rhizobial strains. This association provides the necessary nitrogen for plant growth and contributes to improvement of the soil nitrogen balance to the benefit of other crops in intercropping systems or in rotation. Thus, the rhizobial symbiosis could, through the cultivation of legumes, allow farmers to save chemical fertilizer costs and alleviate their environment pollution effects. However, environmental constraints, such as water deficit and low soil phosphorus availability, prevailing in Mediterranean region, reduce SNF performance, thus causing a decrease in grain and forage legume yields. In this context, our present project aims at exploring legume-rhizobia functional diversity to select and characterize symbioses tolerant to water deficit under limiting phosphorus conditions, and will focus on physiological, biochemical and molecular tools at plant and rhizobia levels.