Heliyon (Oct 2023)

Elevated CO2 along with inoculation of cyanobacterial biofilm or its partners differentially modulates C–N metabolism and quality of tomato beneficially

  • Venkatesh Kokila,
  • Radha Prasanna,
  • Arun Kumar,
  • Sekar Nishanth,
  • Bhupinder Singh,
  • Shalini Gaur Rudra,
  • Priya Pal,
  • Madan Pal,
  • Yashbir Singh Shivay,
  • Awani Kumar Singh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. e20470

Abstract

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Diazotrophic cyanobacteria are known to influence nutrient availability in soil, however, their benefits under elevated CO2 environment, particularly on fruit quality attributes, is a less investigated aspect. Laboratory developed cyanobacterium-fungal biofilm (An-Tr), composed of Anabaena torulosa (An) as the matrix with the partner as Trichoderma viride (Tr), along with the individual partners were evaluated under ambient (aCO2-400 ± 50 ppm) and elevated (eCO2-700 ± 50 ppm) conditions, with and without tomato plants. An-Tr inoculation exhibited distinct and significantly higher values for most of the soil microbiological parameters, plant growth attributes and antioxidant/defense enzyme activities measured at 30 and 60 DAI (days after inoculation). Significant enhancement in soil nutrient availability, leaf chlorophyll, with 45–50% increase in the enzyme activities related to carbon and nitrogen assimilation, higher yields and better-quality parameters of tomato, with An-Tr biofilm or An inoculation, were recorded, particularly under eCO2 conditions. The fruits from An-Tr treatments under eCO2 exhibited a higher titrable acidity, along with more ascorbic acid, carotenoids and lycopene content, highlighting the superiority of this inoculant. Multivariate analyses revealed significant (p ≤ 0.05) interactions among cultures, DAI, and CO2 levels, illustrating that cyanobacterial inoculation can be advocated as a strategy to gainfully sequester eCO2. Significant improvement in yield and fruit quality along with 50% N savings, further attest to the promise of cyanobacterial inoculants for tomato crop in the climate change scenario.

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