Abstract
Significant levels of biological nitrogen fixation from sources other than
nodulated legumes have become a tantalizing prospect for decades. Since the
benefit to agriculture of nitrogen fixation from nodulated legumes was
established, there have been widespread efforts to promote the use of various
asymbiotic diazotrophic bacteria to fix extra nitrogen in soil. Despite much
optimism by scientists and farmers, this prospect remains to be realised.
Recently, the prospect has been pursued with renewed enthusiasm and several
commercialised products have appeared. What are the reasons for this fresh
enthusiasm? Are the new products based on realistic assessments of their
biological potential? Why has it taken so long to advance to a stage where
there is still only limited evidence that verifies hope becoming reality?
This review assesses the current contribution from asymbiotic nitrogen
fixation and re-assesses the prospects for greater contributions from this
source. Among the many aspects of this multi-faceted subject that will be
considered are: (i) the range of free-living microbial strains currently
contributing to signficant asymbiotic nitrogen fixation; (ii) the significance
of nitrogen-fixing microbes naturally associated with plants; (iii) the
significance of endophytic systems and their role in sugarcane and other
Gramineae; (iv) the possibility of extending this range by introducing new
strains or discovering new systems capable of contributing additional nitrogen
fixation.
The case will be made that conditions providing a sustainable contribution for
more than a short time are usually missing in such systems so that spontaneous
biological nitrogen fixation is usually transient. It will be argued further
that if all the positive factors controlling spontaneity at the
biothermodynamic level are exploited, significant biological nitrogen fixation
may soon be achieved in some of these systems on farms.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
77 articles.
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