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Identification and study of growth and nitrogenase activity of nitrogen fixing cyanobacteria from tropical soil

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Abstract

Identification of cyanobacteria species has been performed on samples coming from two different harvest areas. The most important fixing belongs to Scytonema genus. The other genus identified are Nostoc and Lyngbia. Moreover, these cells are living closely with non-fixing cyanobacteria as well as with bacteria. The growth of cells as well as nitrogenase activity has been studied on a semi-axenic strain of Scytonema, a nitrogen fixing cyanobacterium, isolated from soil crusts. The cell growth is relatively show in liquid medium depleted in combined nitrogen. The growth rate increases when nitrates are supplied to cells. A release of ammonium is observed in medium during cell culture. This release exhibits several maxima and minima during cell growth. The heterocyst cells disappear within four days when filaments are growing in nitrates supplied medium. On the contrary, the heterocyst frequency increases up to more 5% in a nitrogen depleted medium. The heterocyst frequency reaches a maxima after 4 days of culture, then decreases later on. Nitrogenase activity changes during cells growth too. The maximum activity is observed after 5 to 6 days of culture to decrease after even though the cells are still in their exponential phase of growth. Nitrogenase activity increases with light intensity, what indicate a possible relation between photosynthetic and nitrogenase activities.

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Jeanfils, J., Tack, J.P. Identification and study of growth and nitrogenase activity of nitrogen fixing cyanobacteria from tropical soil. Vegetatio 103, 59–66 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00033417

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