文摘
Indirect immunofluorescence techniques and confocal scanning laser microscopy were used to identify rhizobacterial strains on the root surfaces of pine seedlings, which were grown from seeds under gnotobiotic conditions. Conifer plant growth promoting rhizobacterial strains Paenibacillus polymyxa L6 and Pw-2, and the forest soil isolate Pseudomonas fluorescens M20, were inoculated onto surface-disinfested pine seeds, singly, or in dual combinations: strains L6 + M20, or strains Pw-2 + M20. Segments containing particular root microsites (root tip, root hair zone, or areas of lateral root emergence) were sampled randomly from roots 7 or 13 weeks after inoculation, and the colonization of roots by each bacterium was observed. Root segments were also sampled from individual roots at six different points along the length of the root, and the qualitative colonization of younger areas, closer to the root tip, contrasted with that of older areas, closer to the root base. The ability of strain M20 to colonize root areas adjacent to sites of lateral root emergence improves in the presence of either P. polymyxa strain, while the ability of the P. polymyxa strains to colonize these areas was not affected. More rhizobacteria were also generally observed on younger root tissues than on areas closer to the root base.