Bioprospecting Soil-Plant Health Management in Horticultural Crops
A special issue of Horticulturae (ISSN 2311-7524). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Nutrition".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2023) | Viewed by 380
Special Issue Editors
Interests: soil fertility; plant nutrition; nutrient diagnosis; nutrient mapping; microbial consortia and rhizosphere engineering; integrated nutrient management; advanced citrus production systems and precision citriculture
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: plant–microbiome interaction; endophytes as biocontrol agents; bioagent-mediated host defense; microbial formulations; plant health assessment through secondary metabolite assessment; microbial bioremediation of soil contaminants
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Microbes playing multifarious roles have opened a floodgate of opportunities in horticultural crops requiring marketable quality production fit for preferred consumer acceptance coupled with extended shelf life to redefine crop production economics. Academic gains imparting field utility on precision and functional microbes are likely to perch modern day horticulture without unwanted use of agrochemicals via a better understanding of metagenomics-driven culture independent microbes. The microbial diversity, thus, previously confined to different microbial niches, has now reached beyond simple agronomic responses to add newer insights in terms of nutrient dynamics, readjusting the microbial fabric of rhizosphere as well as the endosphere to regulate secondary metabolites’ synthesis for plant health endurance, suppressing post-harvest diseases and expanding ecosystem services as environmental carbon offset avenues. These issues also substantiate a rather juvenile concept of soil health and plant health (through better revelations on networking strategies between soil microbes and plant endophytes) to complement each other to harvest the full potential of the existing microbial whirlpool and eventually develop microbes that help toward a more sustainable production system of horticultural crops. This Special Issue is proposed to address some of these intriguing issues still ailing horticultural crops.
Dr. Anoop Kumar Srivastava
Dr. Popy Bora
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- phytobiome diversity
- functional analysis and sequencing
- microbial interactions and upscaling to consortia formulation
- plant health evaluation through secondary metabolite profiling
- plant defense and crop performance
- carbon footprints and microbial response
- savings on chemical fertilizers
- soil nutrient pool
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