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BIO-CONTROL ACTIVITY OF PLANT GROWTH PROMOTING RHIZOBACTERIA ON SCLEROTIUM ROLFSII
Author(s) -
Z. Mary Swaroopa,
R. Jaya Madhuri
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
plant archives/plant archives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2581-6063
pISSN - 0972-5210
DOI - 10.51470/plantarchives.2021.v21.no1.052
Subject(s) - rhizobacteria , sclerotium , context (archaeology) , agriculture , biofertilizer , population , agrochemical , productivity , microbiology and biotechnology , agronomy , biology , environmental science , rhizosphere , ecology , botany , bacteria , paleontology , genetics , demography , macroeconomics , sociology , economics
Crop productivity and crop improvement are colloidal components as the demand of the increasing population, worldwide for the provision of food from crops require dedicated agricultural strategies that tend to lean on natural, available and, beneficial, easily reproducible means of products. In general, the soil components rich in organic matter that can avail rich microbial community initiates agricultural productivity in abundance and in the way to deduce it. But, commercially available chemical pesticides, pollution in the environment, biotic and abiotic constituents are found to be the key components that stress the crop productivity. This can be overtaken by the microbes that can function as both “bio-fertilizer” and “antagonistic” agents, mentioned as Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria(PGPR), as they present satisfactory, advantageous impact when ever required, due to their presence in the rhizospheric region, by providing nutrients uptake from soil and controlling the unnecessary hazardous bio-impact on plants .Present study relies on sustainable agricultural development that utilizes the bacteria from the rhizospheric region thereby recommending bio-formulation in the future to mobilize the unaware farmer for better productivity, free of devastating chemical components that enter the food chain via crop produced by using chemicals, and also by easy means without affecting the surrounding environment and human health. In this context, Sclerotium rolfsii, a deleterious pathogen that affects groundnut crops predominantly, how best can be prevented and can be suppressed by using beneficial PGPR is been studied.

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