Plants regulate their growth using hormones, including a group called strigolactones that prevent excessive budding and branching. Strigolactones also help plant roots form symbiotic relationships with microorganisms that allow the plant to absorb nutrients from the soil. These two factors have led to agricultural interest in using strigolactones to control the growth of weeds and root parasites, as well as improving nutrient uptake. These root-extruding compounds also stimulate germination of witchweeds and broomrapes, which can cause entire crops of grain to fail, making thorough research essential prior to commercial development. Now scientists have synthesized strigolactones from microbes.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/09/210918085833.htm
Sunday, 19 September 2021
Related Posts
What's killing killer whales?Pathology reports on more than 50 killer whales stranded over nearly a… Read More
Leaving so soon? Unusual planetary nebula fades mere decades after it arrivedThe tiny Stingray Nebula unexpectedly appeared in the 1980s is by far … Read More
Leaf microbiomes are a neighborhood affair in northern forestsLeaf microbiomes of sugar maple trees vary across the species' range, … Read More
Scientists reverse age-related vision loss, eye damage from glaucoma in miceResearchers at Harvard Medical School have successfully reversed age-r… Read More
The tree of cortical cell types describes the diversity of neurons in the brainThe tree of cortical cell types provides one of the most detailed and … Read More
Titanium atom that exists in two places at once in crystal to blame for unusual phenomenonBombarding a crystal with neutrons reveals a quantum quirk that frustr… Read More
0 comments: