Research Keyword: nutrient use efficiency

Arbuscular mycorrhizal networks—A climate-smart blueprint for agriculture

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are beneficial organisms that form partnerships with plant roots to improve crop health and productivity without relying heavily on synthetic chemicals. These fungal networks enhance soil health, help plants survive droughts and diseases, improve nutrient absorption, and redistribute water through the soil. By using proper farming practices like crop diversification and fungal inoculants, farmers can harness these natural networks to increase yields while reducing fertilizer costs and environmental pollution.

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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi colonization facilitates nitrogen uptake in cotton under nitrogen-reduction condition

This study shows that beneficial soil fungi (arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi) can help cotton plants absorb more nitrogen from soil, especially when nitrogen fertilizer is reduced. The fungi form partnerships with cotton roots and extend into the soil with thread-like structures that absorb nitrogen and transport it to the plant. The research demonstrates that reducing nitrogen fertilizer while using these beneficial fungi could improve crop growth while reducing environmental pollution from fertilizer runoff.

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