microbiome-engineering
Microbiome engineering is the deliberate modification of microbial communities associated with plants to enhance specific plant traits, functions, and phenotypes. This approach is significant for plant science because it offers a means to improve plant growth, health, and environmental stress tolerance without requiring genetic modification of the plant itself. By optimizing plant-microbe interactions, researchers can leverage microbial functions to address agricultural challenges including nutrient availability, disease suppression, and climate adaptation.
Microbial succession from nursery to vineyard highlights the role o...
The bottle of wine on your dinner table may owe its quality—or its shortcomings—to invisible micr...
Plant microbiome regulation for sustainable agriculture.
Invisible world of microbes in your garden soil is one of the most powerful tools we have for gro...
Harnessing the plant microbiome: innovation towards sustainable agr...
The tomatoes and lettuce in your garden are quietly negotiating with billions of soil microbes ri...
Genotype-Dependent Rhizosphere Microbiome Assembly Improves Potassi...
It means the pears you buy at the grocery store could one day be grown with far less chemical fer...
Successive cultivation under drought selects for specific microbiom...
The wheat in your bread relies on invisible communities of root bacteria to survive dry spells — ...
Agricultural soil microbiomes are structurally and functionally mor...
The compost and living soil you build in a vegetable bed may be quietly cultivating a microbial c...
Microbiome-mediated environmental adaptation in tea plants and its ...
The tea in your morning cup could become scarcer and more expensive as climate change stresses te...
Toward predictive plant microbiomes: From assembly rules to deployment.
Every shovelful of soil in your garden hosts a hidden microbial community that your plants are ac...
Multi-omics analysis of interspecies interactions in a soil Strepto...
Invisible bacterial communities in your garden soil are constantly signaling and competing with e...