| Literature DB >> 31781809 |
Abhinav Aeron1,2, Ekta Khare1,3, Chaitanya Kumar Jha4, Vijay Singh Meena5, Shadia Mohammed Abdel Aziz6, Mohammed Tofazzal Islam7, Kangmin Kim1, Sunita Kumari Meena8,9, Arunava Pattanayak10, Hosahatti Rajashekara10, Ramesh Chandra Dubey2, Bihari Ram Maurya11, Dinesh Kumar Maheshwari2, Meenu Saraf12, Mahipal Choudhary10, Rajhans Verma13, H N Meena14, A R N S Subbanna10, Manoj Parihar10, Shruti Shukla15, Govarthanan Muthusamy16, Ram Swaroop Bana17, Vivek K Bajpai18, Young-Kyu Han19, Mahfuzur Rahman20, Dileep Kumar21, Norang Pal Singh22, Rajesh Kumar Meena23.
Abstract
Plant beneficial rhizobacteria (PBR) is a group of naturally occurring rhizospheric microbes that enhance nutrient availability and induce biotic and abiotic stress tolerance through a wide array of mechanisms to enhance agricultural sustainability. Application of PBR has the potential to reduce worldwide requirement of agricultural chemicals and improve agro-ecological sustainability. The PBR exert their beneficial effects in three major ways; (1) fix atmospheric nitrogen and synthesize specific compounds to promote plant growth, (2) solubilize essential mineral nutrients in soils for plant uptake, and (3) produce antimicrobial substances and induce systemic resistance in host plants to protect them from biotic and abiotic stresses. Application of PBR as suitable inoculants appears to be a viable alternative technology to synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. Furthermore, PBR enhance nutrient and water use efficiency, influence dynamics of mineral recycling, and tolerance of plants to other environmental stresses by improving health of soils. This report provides comprehensive reviews and discusses beneficial effects of PBR on plant and soil health. Considering their multitude of functions to improve plant and soil health, we propose to call the plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPR) as PBR.Entities:
Keywords: Agro-ecosystems; Microbial diversity; Mineral solubilization; Plant-beneficial rhizobacteria (PBR); Soil–plant–microbes interaction
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31781809 DOI: 10.1007/s00203-019-01779-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Microbiol ISSN: 0302-8933 Impact factor: 2.552