soil-microbiome-and-biostimulants
Soil microbiome and biostimulants research explores how microbial communities in the rhizosphere—including bacteria, fungi, and other microorganisms—interact with plant roots to influence growth, nutrition, and stress resilience. Biostimulants, which include microbial inoculants, humic substances, and plant extracts, can enhance these beneficial interactions to improve nutrient uptake, disease resistance, and overall crop performance. Understanding these relationships is transforming sustainable agriculture by offering biological alternatives to synthetic fertilizers and pesticides.
Harnessing endophytes and Multi-Omics for sustainable Colchicine bi...
Researchers demonstrate how beneficial microorganisms living inside Gloriosa superba pl...
Biochar-Amended Soils Increase Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Colonization 2.4x
This matters because if you add biochar to your garden or raised beds, you could more than double...
Soil Microbiome Engineering with Trichoderma harzianum Boosts Tomat...
This matters because a simple, one-time soil treatment could let home gardeners and farmers grow ...
Multimodal learning reveals plants' hidden sensory integration logic.
This matters because understanding how plants 'listen' to helpful fungi could soon lead to crops ...
Translational microbiomes in agriculture: microbial communities as ...
This matters because the invisible communities of microbes living in your garden soil and on plan...
Molecular pathways in plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria-plant in...
This matters because these beneficial bacteria are already living in the soil of your garden and ...
Bacterial microbiota dynamics of Cannabis sativa L. under biotic st...
This matters because the same invisible soil bacteria that help your garden plants thrive can be ...