Plant and microbial strategies to improve the phosphorus efficiency of agriculture

Background Agricultural production is often limited by low phosphorus (P) availability. In developing countries, which have limited access to P fertiliser, there is a need to develop plants that are more efficient at low soil P. In fertilised and intensive systems, P-efficient plants are required to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant and soil 2011-12, Vol.349 (1/2), p.121-156
Hauptverfasser: Richardson, Alan E., Lynch, Jonathan P., Ryan, Peter R., Delhaize, Emmanuel, Smith, F. Andrew, Smith, Sally E., Harvey, Paul R., Ryan, Megan H., Veneklaas, Erik J., Lambers, Hans, Oberson, Astrid, Culvenor, Richard A., Simpson, Richard J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Agricultural production is often limited by low phosphorus (P) availability. In developing countries, which have limited access to P fertiliser, there is a need to develop plants that are more efficient at low soil P. In fertilised and intensive systems, P-efficient plants are required to minimise inefficient use of P-inputs and to reduce potential for loss of P to the environment. Scope Three strategies by which plants and microorganisms may improve P-use efficiency are outlined: (i) Root-foraging strategies that improve P acquisition by lowering the critical P requirement of plant growth and allowing agriculture to operate at lower levels of soil P; (ii) P-mining strategies to enhance the desorption, solubilisation or mineralisation of P from sparingly-available sources in soil using root exudates (organic anions, phosphatases), and (iii) improving internal P-utilisation efficiency through the use of plants that yield more per unit of P uptake.
ISSN:0032-079X
1573-5036
DOI:10.1007/s11104-011-0950-4