Beneficial Soil Microorganisms for Improved Plant Performance and Resilience in Sustainable Agricultural Systems
A special issue of Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This special issue belongs to the section "Farming Sustainability".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2022) | Viewed by 27663
Special Issue Editors
Interests: agroecology; ecology; forest and agriculture; ecology and management of exotic and invasive species; nature conservation; biodiversity; ecosystem services; tolerance to stress and bioremediation; environmental policy; microbial ecology
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: plant-microbe interactions; mycorrhiza; plant beneficial bacteria; sustainable agriculture; phytoremediation
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Intensive agriculture relies on increased use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides and water resources. However, such high-input farming practices are neither sustainable nor environmentally desirable, leading ultimately to public health issues. Moreover, these detrimental effects are predicted to magnify under the warmer, drier climate of the future.
Achieving agricultural sustainability is one of the major challenges of mankind. Several groups of soil microorganisms with their wide range of plant beneficial traits have great potential to be used as agronomic tools that can contribute to mitigating the deleterious effects of intensive farming and progress towards agricultural sustainability.
The interest in applying beneficial microbes for improving plant performance has been steadily growing and their exploration in agroecosystems has never been so relevant and timely. In this context, this Special Issue welcomes recent advances on the roles of beneficial soil microorganisms in sustainable cropping systems. Topics include but are not limited to:
- Crop yield enhancement by soil microbes;
- Influence of beneficial soil microbes in improving the nutritional value of crop foods;
- Microbe-assisted mitigation of plant abiotic stresses (e.g., drought, salinity) related to climate change;
- Contribution of soil microbes for increasing crop tolerance to biotic stresses caused by pathogenic bacteria, fungi, viruses, nematodes, insects, arachnids and weeds;
- Soil microbial diversity and its relation to crop performance;
- Microbial formulations for agricultural applications;
- Inoculation methods of beneficial soil microbes.
Prof. Dr. Helena Freitas
Dr. Rui Oliveira
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- mycorrhizal fungi
- plant growth promoting bacteria
- rhizobia
- Trichoderma
- plant–microbe interactions
- crop yield
- nutritional value
- abiotic stresses
- biotic stresses
- climate change
- microbial diversity
- microbial formulations
- inoculation methods
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