Bacterial “Missing Link” May Help More Plants Fix Nitrogen ITHACA, N.Y. What may be a missing link in the evolution of microorganisms, a bacterium that is both photosynthetic and nitrogen-fixing, has been discov ered at the Boyce Thompson Insti tute for Plant Research (BTI). Bacteria that “fix,” or convert, nitrogen, in symbiosis with legumes are widely known, as are those that derive energy from the sun through photosynthesis. But the newly discovered organism is the firstknown to combine the two capabilities. Studying this bacterium could help genetic engineers to develop ways to incorporate nitrogen C.B. HOOBER & SON, INC. I HOOBER EQUIPMENT, INC. Intercourse, PA ISMHHHHHNHHMHMHHHHHII Middletown, DE (717) 768-8231 ■ ■ TWO LOCATIONS (302) 378-9555 HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM ALL OF US IN THE PARTS DEPARTMENT PARTS MANAGER - RICHARD BOMBERGER ASS’T. PARTS MANAGER - ROY WEAVER ASST. PARTS MANAGER - JOHN STONER ASST. PARTS MANAGER - AL YODER ROAD SALESMAN - KENNETH BEILER ROAD SALESMAN - CARL HERSHEY PARTSMAN - RAY SHISSLER PARTSMAN - DICK SKETHWAY PARTSMAN - BRIAN HORST PARTSMAN - LEON NOLT PARTS SECRETARY - NANCY EBY STOCKMEN - JOHN YODER, LLOYD GROFF, HENRY ESHLEMAN Thank You For Your Patronage In 1988. We Look Forward To Serving Your Parts Needs In 1989. YOU STAY PUT Pick Up Your f* Phone And /\\Place Your v n m Parts & Order - n rj | With ATTENTION TOBACCO GROWERS Golden Leaf Tobacco Company Will Be In Our New Location MARTIN'S SALE BARN 2 Milas east of Intsrcourss at the Junction of New Holland Rd. & Rt. 340, (the original Pennsylvania Tobacco Auction Barn) starting Monday, November 28, 1988 We invite each of you to contact us from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily at our new telephone number for new developments & prices for your 609 tobacco crop. We feel our reputation, to be one of the most honest & reliable deal ers in Lancaster Co., guarantees you rewarding sales for your 1988 609 tobacco crop. We ask only that you call our company before you sell. For those of you who desire to sell your tobacco at auction, we promise our full support in the auction system as we have since its opening in 1985. We also support private sales if you, the farmer, so desire. We advise you to grade your tobacco by color and not too damp for top prices. The outlook is good, please consider us as your buyer this year. Mac Bailey Golden Leaf Tobacco Company fixation capabilities into crop plants that now lack them. Expanding plants’ capability to fix nitrogen from the air would enormously decrease the need for chemical fertilizers. The BTI scientists propose a new genus and species name for the organism, and are preparing a publicatoin describing recent work that demonstrates that the bacterium has photosynthetic capability. They are Joan M. Ellis, Mariangela Hungria, Bertrand D. Eardly, Nancy W. Rizzo and Allan R.J. Eaglesham. BTI is an independent research laboratory based at Cornell University. The Saving Place WE SHIP PARTS DAILY Via UPS-PPSH-BUS-AIR FREIGHT, ETC. fIOUES p B■ S ■ Mon.-Fri. 7 AM-5 PM; Sat. 7 AM-Noon MMT" H 818 CALL US... Authorized It CM Bi We Hm It ups station 717-768-3074 PO Box 218, Intercourse, PA 17534 They have tentatively named the bacterium Photorhizobium thompsonum combining the previx “photo-” with the name rhi zobium given to nitrogen-fixing bacteria. The bacterium was dis covered serendipitously in sand used as growth medium in a BTI greenhouse. . “This is a completely new organism with characteristics of rhizobia as well as those of photo synthetic., bacteria,” said Eaglesham, the BTI plant phys iologist who was studying nitrogen-fixing nodules on plant stems when the surprising bacter ium turned up. “It may represent a By Service We Grow primitive evolutionary form that could give hints of how nitrogen fixing bacteria evolved and how the nitrogen-fixing noduladon in plants began.” The ability of certain plants to fix nitrogen has been a subject of intense study by agricultural sci entists. In this process, legumin ous plants such as soybeans and others in the pea family attract nitrogen-fixing microorganisms that are held in root nodules, allowing them to thrive in soil with little available nitrogen. The rarer growth of nitrogen fixing-nodules on plant stems has been studied at BTI for about 10 years. Stem nodules do not nor mally appear on agriculturally important crops, but do occur on some plants living in flooded con ditions, particularly weedy plants of the genera Aeschynomene and Sesbania. Stem nodulation is believed to aid plants when water cuts off most of the oxygen and nitrogen needed by root nodules. Eaglesham and his BTI col leagues discovered the new bac terium while attempting to save Aeschynomene indica plants with out nodules that were suffering from nitrogen-deficiency. Rather than destroy the dying plants, they transplanted them into sand from another greenhouse and flooded the roots with water. Within two weeks, nitrogen-fixing nodules appeared on the stems. A subsequent series of tests showed that the nodules were caused not by a previously identi fied nitrogen-fixing bacterium in the sand, but by a completely new and different form that fixes nitro gen and conducts photosynthesis. The plant physiologists traced the sand to Virginia. Then they learned that another Aeschynomene species, A. virgini ca, is native to fresh and brackish tidal waters from New Jersey to souther Virginoa. “Bacteria that produce nodules in A. virginica may have been present in small Water Quality Meeting Scheduled EPHRATA (Lancaster) The Octorara Young Farmers Associa tion will be holding its next meet ing at 7:30 p.m. on January 2,1989 at the Octorara High School ag education room. The night’s dis cussion will center on determing water quality. Attendees are invited to bring water samples to the meeting for testing. The water will be tested for copper, iron, hardness, acidity, and nitrates. Methods of correction and Livestock Feed Benefit Deadline YORK York County lives tock growers now have until March 31,1989, to apply for bene fits in the Emergency Feed Prog ram (EFP) or Emergency Feed Assistance Program (EFAP). The original deadline was December 31, 1988. The EFP provides 50% cost-sharing on purchased feed while in EFAP eligible applicants may purchase USDA owned grain at reduced prices. Eligible applic ants are those suffering at least a 40% loss of all feed production amounts of soil, which mix with sand during mining, and may be ‘promiscuous’ enough to form nodules on other Aeschynome species.” liaglesham said. “It is an amazing coincidence,” he continued. “The growth medium we have been using all along for plant studies of all kinds happens to be ‘contaminated’ with a microorganism that causes stem nodulation.” The plant physiologist said the bacterium does not fit in any one taxonomic classification. It dou bles its numbers in less than six hours like the so-called “fast” bac teria of the genus Rhizobium, pro duces enzymes characteristic of the “slow” Bradyrhizodium genus, and conducts photosynthesis. “This is some intermediate form,” Eaglesham said. “Most known photobacteria are photo synthetic only under anerobic con ditions. They live in marine envi ronments or water-logged soils and turn on their photosynthetic abilites when there is not oxygen. This organism is photosynthetic in aerobic environments.” Photorhizobium thompsonum may be an evolutionary link to the first bacteria that tried to form nodules on plants, Eaglesham speculated. He noted that, eVen now, early stages of nodulation are more of a pathogenic interac tion than a symbiotic relationship. The first plant cells that are pene trated by nitrogen-fixing bacteria collapse and die as the plant tries to contain the “infection.” A nitrogen-fixing bacterium that is particularly adept at pene trating plant stems and can pro duce some of its own food and energy from light would seem to have a competitive advantage both during the evolutionary deve lopment of plant nodulation and in the future, as scientists attempt to expand nitrogen-fixing capabili ties to more plant species, Eaglesham said. benefits of making corrections will be discussed. The sponsor of this meeting will be the Martin Water Co., with David Stoltzfus and Richard Breckbill as the speakers for the evening. In the event of inclement weath er, interested people should listen to WCOJ radio station for possible clsoing. The association’s next meeting will be on February 6 and will fea ture a discussion on pesticides. Extended and havo insufficient feed on hand until 1989 crops become available. Interested persons may contact the York County ASCS Office at 120 Pleasant Acres Road. The phone number is 755-2801. “Eligibility for participation in all programs administered by ASCS is established under law without regard to race, color, age, sex, religion, national origin or physical handicap.”