Effect of Native American Bean-corn Biculture Planting on Free-living Bacterial Abundance and Plant Growth (original) (raw)

2015, American Journal of Undergraduate Research

Native American tribes with bountiful harvests. Today it is widely recognized that this associated intercropping system derives much of its success from symbiotic bacteria (e.g. Rhizobium). These bacteria colonize the roots of leguminous plants, allowing them to fix atmospheric nitrogen into ammonia. However, the effect of this intercropping practice on the microbial community, independent of the effect of the symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria, is not well understood. Therefore, a study was designed to model the effects of simultaneously intercropping bean and corn on the abundance of aerobic heterotrophic, free-living nitrogen-fixing, and symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria, as well as plant growth and fecundity markers. In parallel, the benefits mediated by rhizobia were evaluated by inoculating a duplicate set of treatments with N-Dure, a rhizobia-containing inoculum. Native American varieties of pole-bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) and corn (Zea mays mays L.) were planted in monocu...