Identifying plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria tolerant to saline–alkali conditions is critical for developing effective microbial agents and multi-strategy approaches to remediate saline–alkali soil. Two salt–alkali-tolerant bacterial strains—phosphorus-solubilizing Bacillus pumilus JL-C and cellulose-decomposing B. halotolerans XW-3—were isolated from saline–alkali soil, with both exhibiting multiple plant-growth-promoting properties, including nitrogen fixation and the generation of indole-3-acetic acid, siderophores, and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate deaminase. Alfalfa pot experiments were conducted under four treatments: a control, the strain JL-C treatment, the strain XW-3 treatment, and a co-inoculation treatment (JL-C/XW-3), all mixed with corn straw and applied to the saline–alkali soil. The results demonstrated that the co-inoculation treatment yielded the most significant growth-promoting effects on alfalfa, showing enhanced antioxidant enzyme activities; increased contents of proline, soluble sugar, and protein; reduced malondialdehyde content; lowered pH and electrical conductivity; elevated activities of key enzymes; and increased levels of available nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and organic matter content in the soil. The pot experiments were confirmed by field experiments. The results of 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing revealed changes in the bacterial community composition in the alfalfa rhizosphere, showing shifts in the relative abundance of several bacterial taxa often reported as plant-associated or potentially beneficial. This study establishes a combined remediation strategy for saline–alkali soil utilizing complex microbial agents and corn straw.
Wang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.