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Application of Synthetic Consortia for Improvement of Soil Fertility, Pollution Remediation, and Agricultural Productivity: A Review

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13030643

Keywords

synthetic consortia; soil fertility; pollution remediation; agricultural productivity; heavy metals; pesticides; plants' diseases management

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Climate change, inadequate possessions, and land degradation are obstacles to modern agriculture. Chemical-based pesticides and fertilizers impact soil health and crop productivity, while water scarcity leads to the use of heavy metal-enriched water sources in irrigation. Soil pollutants can negatively affect human health. Using beneficial microbes found in plant-associated soil microorganisms as an alternative to chemical fertilizers can improve soil fertility, crop yield, and plant resilience to stress conditions.
Climate change, inadequate possessions, and land degradation all pose obstacles to modern agriculture. In the current scenario, the agriculture industry is mainly dependent on the use of chemical-based pesticides and fertilizers that impact soil health and crop productivity. Moreover, water scarcity leads farmers in drastically affected regions to use heavy metal-enriched water sources mainly originating from industrial sources for field crops irrigation. Soil pollutants can be carried into the human body via dust and water, creating negative health effects varying from simple symptoms, e.g., nausea and diarrhea and reaching death in critical cases. Thus, to clean soil contaminants, and improve soil fertility and agricultural production, alternatives to chemical fertilizers must be developed. Therefore, using beneficial microbes found in plant-associated soil microorganisms offers an effective strategy to alleviate some of these challenges, improving soil fertility, and crop yield, and protecting plants from stress conditions. Through the use of synergistic interactions, the synthetic consortium strategy seeks to improve the stability of microbial communities. In this review, synthetic consortia and their potential use in agriculture were discussed. Further, engineering new effective synthetic consortia was suggested as an effective approach in the concept of environmental bioremediation of soil pollutants and contaminants.

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