Abstract
Thirty-three isolates of indigenous Rhizobium meliloti, either possessing cryptic plasmids that hybridize to probes for symbiotic genes or lacking a 1500-kb megaplasmid band in Eckhardt gels, were tested for infectivity on 10 legume species grown under axenic conditions. A previous study had shown that all but two isolates were symbiotically effective with Medicago sativa. All indigenous isolates and two reference strains of R. meliloti induced nodules which were symbiotically ineffective on Trigonella foenum-graecum (100% plants nodulated) and Phaseolus vulgaris (40 to 100% plants nodulated). Eighteen indigenous isolates of R. meliloti elicited ineffective nodules on Macroptilium atropurpureum (2 to 25% plants nodulated) and Leucaena leucocephala (11 to 75% plants nodulated). The identity of single colony nodule isolates from each R. meliloti inoculant and host combination was verified by phage typing and analysis of plasmid profiles; tests with subsamples of these isolates showed that all were capable of nodulating M. sativa. There was no apparent relationship between the host range of indigenous R. meliloti and either the presence of cryptic plasmids that hybridize to probes for symbiotic genes or the absence of a megaplasmid band in Eckhardt gels. The data suggest that nodulation promiscuity may be a relatively common characteristic of R. meliloti. Key words: host range, Rhizobium meliloti, Leucaena, Macroptilium, Phaseolus.