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Teaming with bacteria : the organic gardener's guide to endophytic bacteria and the rhizophagy cycle / Jeff Lowenfels.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Portland, Oregon : Timber Press, 2022Description: 172 pages : illustrations (colour) ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781643261393
  • 1643261398
Other title:
  • Organic gardener's guide to endophytic bacteria and the rhizophagy cycle
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Botany for students of endophytes -- Biochemistry for students of endophytes -- Bacterial review -- Endophytic bacteria -- The rhizophagy cycle -- Growing with endophytic bacteria -- The endophytic future.
Summary: "Thanks to research conducted over the last few decades, we know that many (and probably all) plants get a significant portion of their nutrients by attracting endophytic bacteria. Gardeners and small-scale growers need to know about endophytic bacteria and the rhizophagy cycle because they have profound implications for how they raise plants. Knowing about them will help readers increase their plant's health and productivity"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 631.584 L917 Available 33111010900898
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A must-read handbook for organic gardeners and small-scale growers.



Thanks to research conducted over the last few decades, we know that most plants get a significant portion of their nutrients by attracting endophytic bacteria--bacteria that live inside a plant's cells. Through a complex process, plant cells harvest the nitrogen and other nutrients in a bacterium's cell wall and expel the bacterium's protoplasts back into the soil where they rebuild their cell walls, start feeding again, and repeat the cycle. Interesting, you may think, but why does this matter? As it turns out, it matters a lot. The bottom line is this: without endophytic bacteria, plants get fewer nutrients and cannot develop properly.

Teaming with Bacteria not only explains the rhizophagy cycle; it shows you how to harness this amazing process to increase productivity and plant health. In addition, endophytic bacteria increase a plant's tolerances to abiotic and biotic stresses and controlling pathogens. This is exactly what we need if we are to deal effectively with climate change, soil loss, and feeding a rapidly burgeoning population. Gardeners, farmers, and other growers must adjust best practices--and develop new ones--to ensure that the rhizophagy cycle can operate at its most efficient pace and that the right endophytic bacteria can do what they are supposed to do.



Just as Teaming with Microbes introduced gardeners and growers to the soil food web, Teaming with Bacteria adds to that science by sharing the latest research on endophytic bacteria (bacteria that live inside plants) and rhizophagy (plants "eating" bacteria)--discoveries that have profound implications for the practices of home gardeners and small-scale growers.

Includes index.

Botany for students of endophytes -- Biochemistry for students of endophytes -- Bacterial review -- Endophytic bacteria -- The rhizophagy cycle -- Growing with endophytic bacteria -- The endophytic future.

"Thanks to research conducted over the last few decades, we know that many (and probably all) plants get a significant portion of their nutrients by attracting endophytic bacteria. Gardeners and small-scale growers need to know about endophytic bacteria and the rhizophagy cycle because they have profound implications for how they raise plants. Knowing about them will help readers increase their plant's health and productivity"-- Provided by publisher.

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