Root-zone microbes act as nutrient delivery partners for plants
Soil Health
The soil under your tomato bed or favorite oak tree is packed with bacteria and fungi that hand nutrients directly to roots, so building healthy soil biology can matter more than adding another bag of fertilizer.
Right around plant roots lives a busy community of bacteria and fungi called the rhizosphere microbiome. These microbes break down nutrients in the soil and shuttle them to the plant, almost like a delivery service. Understanding how this partnership works could help gardeners and farmers grow healthier plants while using less synthetic fertilizer.
Key Findings
Rhizosphere microbes convert soil nutrients into forms plants can absorb, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus.
Microbial communities near roots can be shaped or encouraged to improve plant nutrient efficiency.
Enhancing beneficial root-zone microbes offers a potential path to reduce reliance on chemical fertilizers.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Soil microbes living around plant roots help plants pull in nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus more efficiently, which could mean healthier crops and gardens with less fertilizer.
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