| Literature DB >> 27303430 |
Małgorzata M Posmyk1, Katarzyna Szafrańska1.
Abstract
Stresses provoked by adverse living conditions are inherent to a changing environment (climate change and anthropogenic influence) and they are basic factors that limit plant development and yields. Agriculture always struggled with this problem. The survey of non-toxic, natural, active substances useful in protection, and stimulation of plants growing under suboptimal and even harmful conditions, as well as searching for the most effective methods for their application, will direct our activities toward sustainable development and harmony with nature. It seems highly probable that boosting natural plant defense strategies by applying biostimulators will help to solve an old problem of poor yield in plant cultivation, by provoking their better growth and development even under suboptimal environmental conditions. This work is a concise review of such substances and methods of their application to plants.Entities:
Keywords: bioregulators; biostimulants; environmental stresses; organic farming; plant stress physiology
Year: 2016 PMID: 27303430 PMCID: PMC4885868 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2016.00748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Bioregulators and biostimulators: general comparison of their properties.
| Bioregulators | Biostymulators |
|---|---|
| Phytohormones | Phytostimulators |
| Auxins, giberelins, cytokinins, ABA, JA, ethylene, and brassinosteroids | Different substances of natural origin (could be also syntezised), their mixtures, bio-extracts |
| • Natural (usually secondary metabolites) or synthetic substances (hormone analogs) | • Non-toxic, safe for human and environment substances |
| • Not nutritional elements | • Supply ready for use beneficial elements or organic compounds that are usually generated via many complicated biochemical processes in plants – time and energy saving |
| • Transported from the place of their synthesis to the action site in plants | • Active at the site of their absorbtion an/or transpodted all over a plant |
| • Act at low concentrations | • Act at different concentrations |
| • Regulate directly plant metabolism at molecular, cytological levels as well as in a whole plant – regulate plant growth and development | • Indirectly regulate life processes influencing metabolism in many ways ( |
| • Show pleiotropic effects and often act as signaling molecules responsive to internal and external stimuli | • Some of them are able to influence plant signaling cascades |
| • Improve plant life processes; however, exogenous application of phytohormons can modify natural pathways of plant development (e.g., induction of fruit parthenogenesis, callus cultures or plant cell culture | • Improve plant growth and development; rationalize plant life processes not modyfiying their natural program |