MICROBES FOR RECLAMATION OF BARREN LAND

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
BIOFERTILIZERS NITROGEN-FIXERS.
Advertisements

F2- Microbes and the Environment Matt Oda Tia Rosehill Ross Tanaka.
ORGANIC RICE BYV.HARIHARASUDHANBSA what is organic rice?  Organic rice is grown using natural and not chemical fertilizers, which are harmful.
Learning outcomes Describe the cycle of carbon through the ecosystem Describe how humans have affected the carbon cycle.
Nutrient Circulation Waste is in the form of dead organisms: animals/ plants/ leaves faeces urine All can contain nutrients and/or energy If the nutrients.
Nitrogen Cycle By Taylor, Sabrina, Tatiana, Arthur.
Energy Cycling. Energy Flow within an Ecosystem Sun Producers Primary Consumer Secondary/Tertiary Consumer Decomposers Heat Chemical Energy Solar Energy.
Chapter 19-2: Fungi in Nature
The Nitrogen Cycle Living things need nitrogen. It is an important element in proteins, DNA, and other chemical compounds. Nitrogen is found.
UNIVERSITY OF BATH FOUNDATION YEAR BIOLOGY MODULE SEMESTER 2 ASSIGNMENT 1 PRESENTATION.
Biofertilizers Use in Tomato
INTRODUCTION Cyanobacteria ( BGA) can be found in almost every conceivable environment. Blue green algae are photosynthetic Cyanobacteria and promote the.
Chapter 29 Soil Bacteria and Mycorrhizal Fungi. Concept 29.3: Plants roots absorb essential elements from the soil Water, air, and soil minerals contribute.
AP Environmental Science Soil Resources (Ch 14) Living in the Environment, 14th edition, G. Tyler Miller.
CHAPTER 10 BIOFERTILIZER.
Basic Microbial Ecology Microbial Ecology Supplemental instruction Designed by Pyeongsug Kim ©2010
Grade 8 Chapter 12-1 Conserving Land and Soil. Objectives Describe how people use land Discuss the kinds of problems that occur when soil is not properly.
Role of microorganisms in the cycling of elements
Plant Nutrition Powerpoint adopted from: Powerpoint%2520files/35Ch37PlantNutrition2005a.pdf+ap+biology+plant+nutrition&hl=en&ct=clnk&c.
Topic Plant Nutrition Biology November 18, 2005.
BioChemical Cycles Earth cycles Living.
Plant Nutrition Chapter 37.
AP Biology Lecture #54 Plant Nutrition. Experimentation  Testing pressure flow hypothesis  using aphids to measure sap flow & sugar concentration.
Life in the Soil Ch 5. Soil teems with life... 1 teaspoon of fertile soil could contain: 100 nematodes 250,000 algae 300,000 amoeba 450,000 fungi 11,700,000.
Ch. 37 Soil and Plant Nutrition Soil contains a living, complex ecosystem Soil particles of various sizes derived from the breakdown of rock are.
Cycling of Matter in a Compost Bin
Plant Nutrition. What happens to the nutrients taken in by the plant?  90% of water is lost in transpiration; functions as a solvent; keeps cells turgid;
Environmental Studies Dr Anupam Agarwal. Composition of Soil: Soils are a mixture of different things; rocks, minerals, and dead, decaying plants and.
Soil is a mixture of weathered rock particles and other materials.
Nutrients Chapter 6.
Biofertilizer use in Banana
Food Chain. Food Webs Many individual food chains are interlocked into a food web.
The Nitrogen Cycle The basics….. Essential Question: How does the addition of fertilizer impact the both soil and water quality? Warmup- Porosity and.
Jeopardy Nutrient Cycle Carbon Cycle Phosphorus Cycle Nitrogen Cycle vocabulary Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500.
AP Environmental Science Soil Resources Living in the Environment, 14th edition, G. Tyler Miller.
Food and Agriculture How to feed the ever expanding population Currently 5.8 billion 30 years 12 billion.
Bacteria What kind of microorganisms are bacteria?
Biofertilizers Use in Tomato. Introduction  Biofertilizers are ready to use live formulations of beneficial microorganisms which on application, mobilize.
Topic F2 – Microbes and the Environment
Plant Nutrition. Nutritional needs  Autotrophic does not mean autonomous…  plants need…  sun as an energy source  inorganic compounds as raw materials:
The Nitrogen Cycle The basics…..
The Nitrogen Cycle.
Vermiwash As a component of INM. Introduction Vermiwash, a liquid bio-fertilizer can be collected through the column of activated earthworm. It contains.
Microbes and the Environment Option F.2. Microscopic Producers Convert inorganic molecules into organic molecules. Algae and some bacteria use chlorophyll.
Cycles.
Principles of Ecology. Ecosystem An ecosystem is a natural unit consisting of: Plants Animals micro-organisms physical factors.
MIC 303 INDUSTRIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
INTRODUCTION Nitrogen is an element that is found in both the living portion of our planet and the inorganic parts of the Earth system. It is essential.
AP Biology Plant Nutrition AP Biology Macronutrients  Plants require these nutrients in relatively large amounts  C, O, H, N, P, K, Ca, Mg,
Soil and Plant Nutrition
Why are microbes important? Ecological Importance of Microbes (Applied and Environmental Microbiology Chapter 25)
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Nutrient Cycles.
AP Biology Plant Nutrition AP Biology Nutritional needs  Autotrophic does not mean autonomous  plants need…  sun as an energy source  inorganic.
Nitrogen in the Terrestrial Environment November 15 th, 2006 General Ecology lecture.
Fiji National University
Nitrogen Cycle.
The Nitrogen Cycle.
Nitrogen, Carbon, Phosphorus and Water Cycles
Concepts of Bio-fertilizers
Concepts of Bio-fertilizers
Chapter 29 Part 2.
The Nitrogen Cycle.
PPT PREPARED BY Mrs. VALASAMMA THOMAS ON MICROBES AS BIOCONTROL AGENTS
The Nitrogen Cycle.
Soil Bacteria and Mycorrhizal Fungi and Unusual Plants
The Nitrogen Cycle.
The Nitrogen Cycle.
The Cycling of Matter Energy flows in one direction starting as solar radiation and finally leaving as heat Nutrients Cycle! Absorbed by organisms from.
Plant nutrition Chapter 37.
Presentation transcript:

MICROBES FOR RECLAMATION OF BARREN LAND BY EKTA NARWAL M.SC.III SEM MICROBIOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF MICROBIOLOGY

What is barren land? Barren land is the land which is unfertile, unproductive, or it may be said that barren land is the land which is unable to support plant growth. In general, Barren Land has thin soil, sand, or rocks. Barren lands include deserts, dry salt flats, beaches, sand dunes, exposed rock, strip mines, quaries, and gravel pits

Barren land in India Within the land mass of India, mainly the land areas of Rajasthan, parts of Jammu, Leh, and parts where snowfall prevent any cultivation are barren. According to satellite imageries, 6.5% of total area is under barren land.

Factors responsible for the formation of barren land Deforestation Soil erosion Industrialization Flood irrigation Chemical pesticides Overgrazing

Turning a Barren Land Fertile! Fertile land Barren land

LAND RECLAMATION Land reclamation is the process of converting barren land into fertile land able to support the growth of plants. Microbes for reclamation of barren land Rhizobium sp. Azotobacter sp. Azospirillum sp. Blue green algae Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorhiza(VAM) Vermicomposting Phosphate solubilising microorganisms(PSM)

Rhizobium bacteria colonized on clover root hairs Rhizobium sp. Rhizobium is a genus of Gram-negative soil bacteria that fix nitrogen. Rhizobium forms an endosymbiotic nitrogen fixing association with roots of legumes and Parasponia. Rhizobium bacteria colonized on clover root hairs

Azotobacter sp. Azotobacter colonies . Azotobacter is a genus of usually motile, oval or spherical bacteria. They are aerobic, free-living soil microbes which play an important role in the nitroge cycle in nature.

Azospirillum sp. Azospirillum brasilense Azospirillum is a gram-negative aerobic bacteria that occurs free-living in the soil or associated with the roots of cereal crops or grasses.The bacteria of Genus Azospirillum are  N2 fixing organisms.

Cyanobacteria Nostoc Oscillatoria Cyanobacteria also known as blue-green algae, blue-green bacteria, and Cyanophyta) is a phylum of bacteria that obtain their energy through photosynthesis.Cyanobacteria are capable of nitrogen fixation.

PHOSPHATE SOLUBILISING MICROORGANISMS                                                                Phosphate solubilising bacteria(rod shaped)solubilising non-soluble phosphate(bright white) Phosphate solubilizing Bacteria (PSB) are a group of beneficial bacteria capable of hydrolysing organic and inorganic phosphorus from insoluble compounds. e.g. Bacillus polymyxa,Pseudomonas putida, VAM

Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhiza Vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizas (VAM) and arbuscular mycorrhizas are mutualistic symbioses formed between the roots of most plants. mycorrhizal fungi enhance phosphorus uptake of their host plants and that their presence is more prevalent in roots in low P soils. These mycorrhizas also increase the uptake of other mineral nutrients.,for e.g. P, Cu and Zn. Vesicles Arbuscule

Vermiculture Vermiculture Vermicompost is the product or process of composting utilizing various species of worms, usually red wigglers, white worms, and earthworms to create a heterogeneous mixture of decomposing vegetable or food waste, bedding materials, and vermicast. Vermicast, similarly known as worm castings, worm humus or worm manure, is the end-product of the breakdown of organic matter by a species of earthworm.

BIOREMEDIATION Bioremediation is the use of microorganism metabolism to remove pollutants. Technologies can be generally classified as in situ or ex situ. In situ bioremediation involves treating the contaminated material at the site, while ex situ involves the removal of the contaminated material to be treated elsewhere.

REFERENCES A Textbook of Biotecnology: B. D. Singh, Kalyani Publications. Soil Microbiology: M. S. Subba Rao, Oxford and IBH Publishing House CO. PRIVATE LTD. www.goggle.com

THANK YOU