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    The ability for a soybean plant to be efficiently nodulated when grown as a crop is dependent on the number of effective Bradyrhizobium japonicum that can be found in close proximity to the developing seedling shortly after planting. In Manitoba, the growing of soybean as a crop has increased from less than 500 000 acres in 2008 to over 2.3 million acres in 2017. Since the large increase in soybean production is relatively recent, populations of B. japonicum have not yet developed. In response to this, we developed a primer pair that can identify B. japonicum, and be used to determine the titre found in field soil. Their utility was demonstrated by being used to determine whether row spacing of soybean affects B. japonicum populations, as well as to follow B. japonicum populations in a soybean field over the course of a field season. The data show that plant density can affect B. japonicum populations. Moreover, evidence is presented that suggests plant development affects overall B. japonicum populations.

    Citation

    Harry Yudistira, Barney A Geddes, Charles M Geddes, Robert H Gulden, Ivan J Oresnik. qPCR assay targeting Bradyrhizobium japonicum shows that row spacing and soybean density affects Bradyrhizobium population. Canadian journal of microbiology. 2021 Jul;67(7):529-536

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    PMID: 33049159

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