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Novel Technique Reveals Insights Into Soil Microbe Alarm Clock

By Jeff Mulhollem

Soil microbes benefit plants by helping with nutrient uptake and disease resistance. Modulating these communities of bacteria and fungi could potentially sustainably improve agriculture, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. But a major obstacle to this approach has been that many of these microbes are dormant, or inactive, in the soil — and microbes must become active to colonize plant roots, moving into and living inside plant tissues. Until now, it hasn’t been clear how dormancy affects which microbes make it into a plant, but in a new study using a novel technique, a team of researchers at Penn State found that a microbe’s activity appears to matter more than abundancy.

They published their results in mSystems, a journal published by the American Society for Microbiology. The researchers found that microbial activity was 10 times higher inside the plant — the endosphere — compared to nearby soil or even soil right around the root — the rhizosphere.

They hypothesized that the disparity likely resulted because plants provide more nutrients inside their tissues. Active microbes in the rhizosphere — soil right around the root — were more likely to colonize the plant than microbes that were abundant but more dormant.

Source : psu.edu

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Border View Farms is a mid-sized family farm that sits on the Ohio-Michigan border. My name is Nathan. I make and edit all of the videos posted here. I farm with my dad, Mark and uncle, Phil. We also have a part-time employee, Brock. My dad started the farm in 1980. Since then we have grown the operation from just a couple hundred acres to over 3,000. Watch my 500th video for a history of our farm I filmed with my dad.

I started making these videos in the fall of 2019 as a way to help show what I do on a daily basis as a farmer. Agriculture is different from any other industry and I believe the more people that are showing their small piece of agriculture, helps to build our story. We face unique challenges and stressful situations but have some of the most rewarding payoffs in the end. I get to spend everyday doing what I love, raising my kids on the farm, and trying to push our farm to be better every year. I hope that I can address questions or concerns that you might have about farms and agriculture.