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Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Plant growth promotion of wheat inoculated with Penicillium radicum sp. nov.

M. A. Whitelaw, T. J. Harden and G. L. Bender

Australian Journal of Soil Research 35(2) 291 - 300
Published: 1997

Abstract

A phosphate-solubilising isolate of Penicillium radicum (sp. nov.) was used to inoculate wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. Dollarbird) in a glasshouse experiment and a field trial, using low pH soils at 5 levels of phosphate application. When data for all phosphate application levels were combined, inoculation by P. radicum resulted in 14% increases in wheat yield in the field trial and increases in both phosphate uptake (10%) and yield (9%) in the glasshouse. In the glasshouse, the response to inoculation was higher at the nil phosphate application level (17%) than for the combined phosphate application levels (9%). This negative interaction indicates that growth promotion could be partially due to soil phosphate solubilisation by the fungus, with a greater response for soils with lower available P. However, other plant-growth promotion mechanisms may also be involved.

Keywords: phosphate solubilisation, soil phosphate.

https://doi.org/10.1071/S96040

© CSIRO 1997

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