Not AvailablePlant microbiome (Epiphytic, endophytic and rhizospheric) plays important role in plant growth, development, and soil health. Plant and rhizospheric soil are valuable natural resource harbouring hotspots of microbes, and it plays critical roles in the maintenance of global nutrient balance and ecosystem function. The diverse group of microbes is key components of soil-plant systems, where they are engaged in an intense network of interactions in the rhizosphere/phyllospheric/endophytic. The microbes with plant growth promoting (PGP) attributes have emerged as an important and promising tool for sustainable agriculture. PGP microbes promote plant growth and development directly or indirectly, either by relea...
Not AvailablePlants associate with communities of microbes (bacteria and fungi) that play critical r...
Not AvailableFor this study, plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) were isolated from soils un...
Not AvailableThe plant growth and its microbial harbours have a place in influencing the transformat...
Not AvailableEndophytic microbes are known to live asymptomatically inside their host throughout dif...
Not AvailableThe beneficial microbes plays an important role in medical, industrial, and agricultura...
Not AvailableThe use of plant growth promoting bacteria may prove useful in developing strategies to...
Not AvailableThe plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (or PGPR) are the beneficial microorganism tha...
Not AvailableThe plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (or PGPR) are the beneficial microorganism th...
Not AvailablePlant growth promoting rhizobacteria are the soil bacteria inhabiting around/on the roo...
Not AvailableAs one of the most important and essential macronutrients next to nitrogen, phosphorus ...
Not AvailableWith the increasing world’s population, higher demand for sustainable food production s...
Not AvailableWith the increasing world’s population, higher demand for sustainable food production s...
Not AvailableFifty years ago, the green revolution increased agricultural production worldwide, savi...
Not AvailableSoil, the skin of the Earth is one of the fundamental natural resource and important co...
Not AvailablePlant beneficial rhizobacteria (PBR) is a group of naturally occurring rhizospheric mic...
Not AvailablePlants associate with communities of microbes (bacteria and fungi) that play critical r...
Not AvailableFor this study, plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) were isolated from soils un...
Not AvailableThe plant growth and its microbial harbours have a place in influencing the transformat...
Not AvailableEndophytic microbes are known to live asymptomatically inside their host throughout dif...
Not AvailableThe beneficial microbes plays an important role in medical, industrial, and agricultura...
Not AvailableThe use of plant growth promoting bacteria may prove useful in developing strategies to...
Not AvailableThe plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (or PGPR) are the beneficial microorganism tha...
Not AvailableThe plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (or PGPR) are the beneficial microorganism th...
Not AvailablePlant growth promoting rhizobacteria are the soil bacteria inhabiting around/on the roo...
Not AvailableAs one of the most important and essential macronutrients next to nitrogen, phosphorus ...
Not AvailableWith the increasing world’s population, higher demand for sustainable food production s...
Not AvailableWith the increasing world’s population, higher demand for sustainable food production s...
Not AvailableFifty years ago, the green revolution increased agricultural production worldwide, savi...
Not AvailableSoil, the skin of the Earth is one of the fundamental natural resource and important co...
Not AvailablePlant beneficial rhizobacteria (PBR) is a group of naturally occurring rhizospheric mic...
Not AvailablePlants associate with communities of microbes (bacteria and fungi) that play critical r...
Not AvailableFor this study, plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) were isolated from soils un...
Not AvailableThe plant growth and its microbial harbours have a place in influencing the transformat...