INVESTIGADORES
VALVERDE Claudio Fabian
artículos
Título:
Current research on Plant-Growth Promoting Rhizobacteria in Latin-America: Meeting report from the 2nd Latin-American PGPR Workshop
Autor/es:
CLAUDIO VALVERDE; CAMILO RAMIREZ; JOSEPH KLOEPPER; FABRICIO CASSÁN
Revista:
JOURNAL OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2015 vol. 34 p. 215 - 219
ISSN:
0721-7595
Resumen:
Crop performance depends, to a large degree, on biological activities taking place in the root environment. By the early twentieth century, it was already recognized that plants exert key effects on the soil space just outside the root surface. This led to the concept of the rhizosphere, that is, the portion of the soil that is directly influenced by the root (Hiltner 1904). The rhizosphere contains diverse microorganisms that induce beneficial, neutral, or deleterious effects on plant growth. The beneficial rhizosphere bacteria were deemed plant-growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) (Kloepper and Schroth 1978). The rhizosphere was then recognized to be an active microbial habitat with complex and multitrophic biological interactions among microbes and eukaryotic organisms, and focused studies on these interactions began. The applications of such knowledge were of direct economical relevance given that PGPRs may be utilized as agronomic inputs to increase crop yields. This gave rise to a community of scientists interested in elucidating the mechanisms displayed by PGPR species and understanding the role of the plant in shaping the microbial community of the rhizosphere. In parallel, a number of private companies started to commercialize PGPR-based products for a range of agronomical applications worldwide, with Latin American countries taking the lead in this field.