Soil bacteria help green beans survive drought, and AI predicts how well
Climate Adaptation
If you grow beans in a garden that dries out mid-summer, the right root bacteria could keep your plants producing even when you can't water as often as you'd like.
Researchers applied beneficial bacteria to green bean roots and then cut back on watering to see how well the plants coped. The bacteria, especially one called Stenotrophomonas rhizophila, helped the plants stay greener and heavier even when they only received 60-80% of normal water. The team also trained computer models to predict which traits would suffer most under drought, giving farmers a way to anticipate problems before they show up in the field.
Key Findings
Severe drought (40% of normal irrigation) cut shoot and root mass by roughly 40%, but PGPR treatments partially reversed this loss, with the best bacterial strain boosting shoot fresh weight by about 20% over untreated plants.
Total chlorophyll levels rose by more than 80% in bacteria-treated plants under moderate drought (60% irrigation) compared to untreated controls under the same conditions.
A generalized regression neural network achieved R² = 0.87 for predicting catalase activity, while a multilayer perceptron model hit R² = 0.89 for carotenoid content, demonstrating that machine learning can reliably forecast plant stress responses.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Soil bacteria applied to green bean roots can offset much of the damage caused by drought, boosting plant weight and chlorophyll by significant margins even under water-restricted conditions. Pairing these bacterial treatments with neural network models gives growers a sharper tool for predicting and managing drought stress in their crops.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Integrating plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria and machine learning for drought tolerance assessment in green bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)
Drought stress is one of the most critical constraints limiting crop productivity worldwide, particularly under increasing water scarcity driven by climate change. In this study, the effects of pla...
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Soil health is the capacity of soil to function as a living ecosystem, supporting complex interactions between microorganisms, soil fauna, and plant communities. For plant science, soil health is critical because these biological and chemical soil properties directly control nutrient availability,
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