arid-agriculture
Arid agriculture is the practice of cultivating crops and useful plants in regions with scarce rainfall and extreme drought conditions, relying on drought-tolerant species, water-efficient irrigation, and soil management strategies. For plant science, it is a critical field of study because it drives research into the physiological and molecular mechanisms that enable plants to survive water stress, including adaptations in root architecture, stomatal regulation, and osmotic adjustment. Understanding these mechanisms informs breeding programs and biotechnological efforts aimed at developing resilient crop varieties suited to expanding dryland regions worldwide.
Endophytic and rhizospheric bacterial consortia from Peganum harmal...
Contaminated soil near old industrial sites, roads, or dumped waste can quietly pass lead into fo...
Comparative Analysis of Lavandula Dentata Rhizosphere Microbiota Ac...
Understanding which microbes help lavender thrive in near-desert conditions could lead to natural...
Micro-Sprinkler Irrigation Efficacy: A Meta-Analysis of Water Produ...
Date palms — the trees behind the Medjool and Deglet Noor dates in your kitchen — survive where a...
Synergistic effects of organic fertilizer and copper-calcium nanopa...
Growing onions in near-desert soil with little water is a real challenge facing farmers across No...
Analysis of salt change and desalination effect of saline soil in X...
Salty, degraded soil is quietly swallowing farmland across arid regions worldwide, and this study...
Trait-based analysis of yield formation and nitrogen use efficiency...
Sandy desert soils are a preview of what climate-stressed gardeners face when soil organic matter...
Micro-Sprinkler Irrigation Efficacy: A Meta-Analysis of Water Produ...
Date palms producing the Medjool and Deglet varieties on your grocery shelf depend on ancient oas...