2 To find effective alternatives to reduce the application of conventional urea (CU), a conventional biofertilizer (CB) preparation (charcoal mixed Azotobacter chroococcum and Bacillus subtilis) and the same biofertilizers entrapped in an organic matrix consisting of cow dung, rice bran, dried powder of neem leaves, and clay soil in 1:1:1:1 ratio and 25% (w/w) saresh (plant gum of Acacia sp.), named as super granules of biofertilizers (SGBF) were applied to cultivate wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. 'WH-711') in experimental plots. The results revealed that the efficacy of commercially available charcoal mixed biofertilizers could not prove as effective alternative to CU, whereas the same dose of biofertilizers entrapped in the organic matrix, SGBF, resulted in a significant increase in growth and productivity of wheat. It appears that SGBF prepared and applied in this study is an effective organic alternative to the urea for wheat cultivation in semi-arid subtropical agro-ecosystems.
Among four cultivars of Brassica juncea L., viz., TM-4, TM-2, cv. T-59 was relatively more tolerant to nickel (Ni) toxicity based on the growth parameters, seedling vigor index, and metal tolerance index. Nickel application inhibited the activity of the nitrate-assimilating enzyme nitrate reductase in the roots, stem, and leaves, whereas the total organic nitrogen, proline, and activity of a polyamine-metabolizing enzyme, diamine oxidase, increased in this tolerant cultivar (T-59). It accumulated a good amount of Ni from the soil in its root and shoot (i.e., 6.0-6.51 mg Ni g À1 dry weight) during 2 months of cultivation with an 8.0 mM Ni supply in the soil. The data presented in this paper indicate that Ni tolerance and its removal by Indian mustard from subtropical Indian soil is cultivar dependent, possibly due to different genetic and physiological adaptations of the cultivars.
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