Optimizing mung bean productivity and root morphology with biofertilizers for sustainable farming
Afsaneh Yousefi, Jaafar Nabati, Reza Mirzaeetalarposhti, Ali Malakshahi Kurdestani

TL;DR
This study explores how biofertilizers and chemical fertilizers affect mung bean growth, root structure, and yield to support sustainable farming practices.
Contribution
The study introduces a microbial consortium that enhances biological nitrogen fixation and mung bean productivity as a sustainable alternative to chemical fertilizers.
Findings
Urea increased grain yield and biomass significantly compared to the control.
The microbial consortium improved root nodulation and yield components more than other treatments.
Genotype-specific responses to fertilizers were observed, with Partow performing better under urea.
Abstract
The excessive use of chemical fertilizers has raised major environmental and economic concerns in legume cultivation. This study assessed the effects of various fertilizers, including biofertilizers and chemical nitrogen, on yield, root characteristics, and nutrient dynamics in two mung bean genotypes (Partow, IC418452). Field trials were conducted over a two-year period in Mashhad, Iran, using a factorial randomized block design. Treatments included two genotypes and six fertilizer levels: control, N-fixing bacteria (FLNF), P-solubilizing bacteria (PSB), K-solubilizing bacteria (KSB), a consortium (FLNF + PSB + KSB), and Urea. Yield components, biomass, root morphology, nodulation, and plant/soil NPK concentrations were measured and analyzed. Fertilizers significantly affected yield, biomass, root structure, and nutrient uptake. Urea yielded the highest biomass, grain yield, and root…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLegume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis · Agricultural pest management studies · Genetic and Environmental Crop Studies
