DOAJ Open Access 2023

The Hydroponic Rockwool Root Microbiome: Under Control or Underutilised?

Phil Thomas Oliver G. G. Knox Jeff R. Powell Brian Sindel Gal Winter

Abstrak

Land plants have an ancient and intimate relationship with microorganisms, which influences the composition of natural ecosystems and the performance of crops. Plants shape the microbiome around their roots by releasing organic nutrients into the soil. Hydroponic horticulture aims to protect crops from damaging soil-borne pathogens by replacing soil with an artificial growing medium, such as rockwool, an inert material made from molten rock spun into fibres. Microorganisms are generally considered a problem to be managed, to keep the glasshouse clean, but the hydroponic root microbiome assembles soon after planting and flourishes with the crop. Hence, microbe–plant interactions play out in an artificial environment that is quite unlike the soil in which they evolved. Plants in a near-ideal environment have little dependency on microbial partners, but our growing appreciation of the role of microbial communities is revealing opportunities to advance practices, especially in agriculture and human health. Hydroponic systems are especially well-suited to active management of the root microbiome because they allow complete control over the root zone environment; however, they receive much less attention than other host–microbiome interactions. Novel techniques for hydroponic horticulture can be identified by extending our understanding of the microbial ecology of this unique environment.

Topik & Kata Kunci

Penulis (5)

P

Phil Thomas

O

Oliver G. G. Knox

J

Jeff R. Powell

B

Brian Sindel

G

Gal Winter

Format Sitasi

Thomas, P., Knox, O.G.G., Powell, J.R., Sindel, B., Winter, G. (2023). The Hydroponic Rockwool Root Microbiome: Under Control or Underutilised?. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11040835

Akses Cepat

Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2023
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.3390/microorganisms11040835
Akses
Open Access ✓