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- BookGamini Seneviratne, Junaida Shezmin Zavahir, editors.Summary: This book is about the role played by microbes in their community mode in sustaining ecosystems. The descriptions given in its chapters indicate clearly that microbial communities are more effective in delivering multifaceted benefits to the soil-plant system than those offered by microbial monocultures in planktonic modes. The role these communities play in a multitude of microbe-microbe and plant-microbe interactions have not yet been fully exploited to gain benefits in this field as well as to achieve sustainability in agriculture practices. Amply discussed are the beneficial characteristics and metabolic capacities of specific microbial groups and the use of microbial traits for the benefit of plant growth. The book suggests the need to develop new microbial technologies to utilize plant-associated microbes for increased crop productivity and agroecosystem balance in order to ensure sustainability. This also provides an effective guidance to scientists, academics, researchers, students and policy makers of the sphere to achieve the above outcomes.-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
1. Role of microbial communities in plant-microbe interactions, metabolic cooperation and self-sufficiency leading to sustainable agriculture
2. Symbiotic interactions of phototrophic microbes : engineering synthetic consortia for biotechnology
3. Understanding agriculturally indispensable bacterial biofilms in sustainable agriculture
4. Global food demand and the roles of microbial communities in sustainable crop protection and food security : an overview
5. Sustaining productivity through integrated use of microbes in agriculture
6. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi for sustainable crop protection and production
7. Role of microbial communities in sustainable rice cultivation
8. Applications of soil bacterial community in carbon sequestration : an accost towards advanced eco-sustainability
9. Approach towards sustainable crop production by utilizing potential microbiome
10. Diversity, function and application of fungal iron chelators (siderophores) for integrated disease management
11. Role of microbial communities in the low-cost, sustainable treatment of pig effluent waste
12. Metal stress impacting plant growth in contaminated soil is alleviated by microbial siderophores
13. Natural and constructed cyanobacteria-based consortia for enhancing crop growth and soil fertility
14. Microbial communities based biofilmed biofertilizers enhance soil fertility and plant growth in hevea ecosystem : evidences from seedlings and immature plants. - ArticleGanda OP, Sawin CT, Iber F, Glennon JA, Mitchell ML.Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 1978 Jul;2(3):297-9.Fifty-two percent of patients with chronic heavy intake of ethanol had an abnormally low growth hormone (GH) response to propranolo-glucagon. The effect of ethanol is transient, since the GH response was normal in patients studied 2 wk or more after withdrawal of ethanol. The low GH response was not due to a difference in the levels of glucose or insulin. Ethanol probably suppresses the GH response by acting on the hypothalamus or pituitary gland. Along with previous data suggesting transient ACTH deficiency in chronic alcoholic patients, our findings suggest that these patients may have multiple hypothalamic-pituitary deficiencies.