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. 1988 Jun;54(6):1494–1497. doi: 10.1128/aem.54.6.1494-1497.1988

Reliability of the Most-Probable-Number Technique for Enumerating Rhizobia in Tropical Soils

Paul L Woomer 1, Paul W Singleton 1, B Ben Bohlool 1,*
PMCID: PMC202685  PMID: 16347661

Abstract

We used six rhizobium-legume systems to test the reliability of the most-probable-number (MPN) technique for enumerating rhizobia introduced into 14 sites representing four soil orders. The range-of-transition values (the number of dilution steps between the first not-entirely-positive and the last not-entirely-negative growth units) were compared for each species and for each soil. The probability that the observed data were significantly different from theoretical values varied with the species. The acceptability of MPN codes (P > 0.99) was the highest (97 to 99%) with Vicia sativa, Trifolium repens, and Glycine max and lowest (72%) with Leucaena leucocephala. Medicago sativa and Macroptilium atropurpureum yielded 87 and 75% acceptable MPN codes, respectively. The acceptability of the MPN data obtained for a host species was related to rooting habit and time to nodulation. Comparison of data for each soil indicated that, despite large differences in characteristics, the soil was not a major source of variability in the MPN counts. There was no significant interaction of the range of transition of rhizobium-legume plant infection count data between species and site.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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