Inorganic phosphate solubilization by two Penicillium species in solution culture and soil

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Abstract

Two fungal isolates, Penicillium bilaji and Penicillium cf.fuscum were found to solubilize different amounts of rock phosphate in liquid culture. Inorganic P solubilization was directly related to the pH drop generated by each isolate. Nitrogen in the ammonium form in the medium was necessary for increased P solubilization by P. bilaji. Penicillium isolates and the form of nitrogen affected the duration of the lag before each isolate began to solubilize P, the rate at which inorganic P was solubilized and the net amount of P solubilized and maintained in solution. In a greenhouse experiment, wheat, Triticum aestivum L. cv. Neepawa, was grown in a calcareous Chernozemic soil which had low available P. When this soil was inoculated with P. bilaji, plant dry matter yield increased by 16%, and total plant P uptake by 14%. P. bilaji also increased the proportion of P derived from native P sources by 11% even in the presence of added rock phosphate. © 1988.

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Asea, P. E. A., Kucey, R. M. N., & Stewart, J. W. B. (1988). Inorganic phosphate solubilization by two Penicillium species in solution culture and soil. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 20(4), 459–464. https://doi.org/10.1016/0038-0717(88)90058-2

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