Application of Plant Growth Promoting Rhizobacteria to Improve Soil Chemical and Biological Properties and Its Effect on Growth, Physiology and Yield of Okra (Abelmoschus esculentus L.)
Zakiah Mustapha, Nik Nurnaeimah Nik Mohamad Nasir, Mohd Khairi Che Lah, Norhayati Ngah, Khamsah Suryati Mohd, Radziah Othman, Hafizan Juahir

TL;DR
This study shows that using specific soil bacteria can boost okra growth and reduce the need for chemical fertilizers.
Contribution
The study introduces a mixed-strain PGPR inoculant that significantly improves okra yield and soil properties while reducing fertilizer use.
Findings
Mixed PGPR strains increased okra yield by 27.90% and leaf number by 27.85%.
Soil bacterial count increased by 22.79% with mixed PGPR treatment.
PGPR inoculation reduced NPK fertilizer use by 30% without compromising plant growth.
Abstract
The use of Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria (PGPR) as a biofertiliser was proven to be successful in the optimisation of plant growth and yield. A field experiment was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the PGPR on okra growth, physiology, yield and soil physicochemical properties. The okra was planted and fertilised with organic material (goat dung) at 500 g/plant, NPK fertiliser at 100 g/plant (T1) and 70 g/plant for T2, T3, T4 and T5, respectively. The BRIS soil isolated PGPR, namely UA 1 (Paraburkholderia unamae), UA 6 (Bacillus amyloliquefaciens) and UAA 2 (Enterobacter asburiae) propagated in 6% molasses medium were inoculated with the amount of 40 mL for single strain treatment (T2–T4) and 15 mL of each bacterial inoculum for mixed strains treatment (T5). Results showed that inoculation with PGPR in single or mixed strains has significantly decreased the use of 30%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNematode management and characterization studies · Legume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis · Magnetic and Electromagnetic Effects
