<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<xml>
  <records>
    <record>
      <source-app name="Horizon">Horizon</source-app>
      <rec-number>1</rec-number>
      <foreign-keys>
        <key app="Horizon" db-id="fdi:010086746">1</key>
      </foreign-keys>
      <ref-type name="Journal Article">17</ref-type>
      <work-type>ACL : Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture répertoriées par l'AERES</work-type>
      <contributors>
        <authors>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Njaramanana, N. M. R.</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Rahetlah, V. B.</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="bold" font="default" size="100%">Trap, Jean</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Autfray, P.</style>
          </author>
        </authors>
      </contributors>
      <titles>
        <title>Field arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculation increased plant performance without phosphorus fertilizer supply of four promoted upland rice varieties in Madagascar</title>
        <secondary-title>Experimental Agriculture</secondary-title>
      </titles>
      <pages>e57 [14 ]</pages>
      <keywords>
        <keyword>Acidic soil</keyword>
        <keyword>Phosphorus deficiency</keyword>
        <keyword>Oryza sp</keyword>
        <keyword>Plant nutrition</keyword>
        <keyword>Seed inoculant</keyword>
        <keyword>Rhizophagus irregularis</keyword>
        <keyword>Root colonization</keyword>
        <keyword>MADAGASCAR</keyword>
      </keywords>
      <dates>
        <year>2022</year>
      </dates>
      <call-num>fdi:010086746</call-num>
      <language>ENG</language>
      <periodical>
        <full-title>Experimental Agriculture</full-title>
      </periodical>
      <isbn>0014-4797</isbn>
      <accession-num>ISI:000901527000001</accession-num>
      <electronic-resource-num>10.1017/s0014479722000527</electronic-resource-num>
      <urls>
        <related-urls>
          <url>https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010086746</url>
        </related-urls>
        <pdf-urls>
          <url>https://horizon.documentation.ird.fr/exl-doc/pleins_textes/2023-02/010086746.pdf</url>
        </pdf-urls>
      </urls>
      <volume>58</volume>
      <remote-database-provider>Horizon (IRD)</remote-database-provider>
      <abstract>In Madagascar, upland rice cropping is constrained by soil acidity and low phosphorus (P) bioavailability. Given their role in plant P nutrition, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) may improve crop yield in nutrient-poor tropical soils. In the Vakinankaratra region, a field experiment was conducted at 908 m asl on an acidic Ferralsol during the 2019-2020 growing season. The aim was to test the ability of four promoted rice varieties to respond to AMF seed-coating inoculation with a commercial strain of Rhizophagus irregularis in the absence or presence of P fertilizer (20 kg ha(-1) of P2O5) under no expected nitrogen (N) limitation. In absence of P fertilization, both at tillering and at maturity and irrespective of the rice varieties, AMF inoculation significantly improved plant performance and finally grain yield, grain N, and grain P amounts by an average of 28%, 30%, and 39%, respectively. In contrast, when P fertilizer was supplied, no significant effect of AMF inoculation was observed. Rice growth variables were significantly higher with the application of P fertilizer than with AMF inoculation both at tillering and at maturity. P fertilizer without inoculation provided an average grain yield improvement of 85%. At tillering, mycorrhizal parameters for root colonization assessment were not positively linked with rice growth variables suggesting an early effect of AMF inoculation. We concluded that, with no P fertilization, AMF seed coating inoculation at the field scale significantly improved upland rice plant performance in a limited soil P environment. Our rice genetic variability did not interfere significantly both with mycorrhizal parameters and crop AMF inoculation benefits.</abstract>
      <custom6>076 ; 084</custom6>
      <custom1>UR210</custom1>
      <custom7>Madagascar</custom7>
    </record>
  </records>
</xml>
