Engineered ammonia-producing bacteria could replace crop fertilizers
Engineered ammonia-producing bacteria could replace crop fertilizers.
Scientists modified the soil-inhabiting bacteria Azotobacter vinelandii. The bacteria were known to convert nitrogen into ammonia but new strain excretes ammonia at much higher levels.In lab tests, when the modified A. vinelandii were added to soil in which rice plants were growing, the plants were observed taking up ammonia produced by the bacteria.
The researchers are now working on developing additional types of A. vinelandii, which produce ammonia at different rates. Specific strains could then be used on specific crop species, based on the plants' ammonia requirements.
In this way, it would be ensured that the plants would use up all the ammonia, so no excess would be left over to run out of the soil and enter nearby waterways. Additionally, farmers wouldn't be paying to use extra fertilizer that wasn't even needed.
"Successful widespread adoption of these biofertilizers for farming would reduce pollution, provide sustainable ways of managing the nitrogen cycle in soil, lower production costs and increase profit margins for farmers and enhance sustainable food production by improving soil fertility," said Mus.
A paper on the study was recently published in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
Read more at:
https://newatlas.com/science/engineered-ammonia-producing-bacteria-crop-fertilizers/