The challenge of producing food at low monetary cost comes with high environmental impacts as yield maximization by excessive fertilization and chemical pest control drive farmers away from using the natural multifunctional potential of soils. We show how the ecological concept of plant-soil feedback can be used to restore the capacity of agricultural soils to provide nutrients, suppress pathogens, and enhance crop resilience sustainably. We review how recent advances in molecular and multiomic methods, soil management, and crop diversification reduce negative and promote positive plant-soil feedback, emphasizing the need for rhizosphere microbiome engineering and soil restoration strategies. Applying nature-based plant-soil feedback principles would enhance transformation to more sustainable agricultural practices that secure food production by restoring natural soil functions, while simultaneously mitigating climate change.
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Wang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/689a0627e6551bb0af8ce003 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.ads2506
Guangzhou Wang
Zhongyuan University of Technology
Wim H. van der Putten
Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
John N. Klironomos
American University of Sharjah
Science
China Agricultural University
Netherlands Institute of Ecology
Graduate School Experimental Plant Sciences
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