ORCID Identifier(s)

0000-0002-6659-6578

Graduation Semester and Year

2022

Language

English

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy in Quantitative Biology

Department

Biology

First Advisor

Woo-Suk Chang

Abstract

Bradyrhizobia are an ideal model organism to study plant-microbe interactions due to dual lifestyles as free-living soil organisms and as endosymbionts for valuable cropping systems in agriculture. Farmers have been utilizing the Soybean-Bradyrhizobium japonicum mutualism for decades to revitalize marginal soils, increase yields, and establish a regenerative approach to farming by mitigating the use of synthetic nitrogenous fertilizers. The largest impediment to bio-fertilizer success is desiccation (e.g., drought) stress before the symbiosis can be established. Due to climate change, fluctuating high temperatures and drought occur seasonally in many growing regions and are becoming a growing concern for modern agriculture. Thus, alternative methods must be presented to farmers to enable sustainable production despite such abiotic extremes. To this end, we have bio-prospected drought-tolerant Bradyrhizobia from the root nodules of soybeans in south Texas and formulated an inoculant for farmers in drought prone regions. Field trials were conducted in the Mid-South for 3 years using the drought-tolerant inoculant B. japonicum TXVA and a non-inoculated control. The drought-tolerant inoculant dominated taproot and total root nodulation and imparted a 7% total grain yield across locations and years. In addition to drought field trials, we were given the opportunity to test the TXVA inoculant under heat stress using a novel temperature gradient greenhouse developed by Dr. Kent Burkey from the USDA in North Carolina. Lastly, whole genomes of two Texas native drought-tolerant isolates (i.e., B. japonicum TXVA & TXEA) were sequenced and the comparative genome analysis was performed among the Texas isolates, B. japonicum USDA 6 and SEMIA 5079. Phylogeny revealed similarities between the native strains and type strain USDA 6 which has been used as an inoculant. Our research allows for further understanding the application, function, and molecular characterization regarding biofertilizers to aid sustainable soybean production in the face of a changing climate.

Keywords

Microbial inoculants, Biofertilizers, Environmental microbiology, Climate-smart farming, Drought stress, Heat stress, Soybean, Drought-tolerant

Disciplines

Biology | Life Sciences

Comments

Degree granted by The University of Texas at Arlington

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Included in

Biology Commons

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