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The action of Arabidopsis DICER-LIKE 2 in plant growth inhibition. [PDF]
Liu Y, Yan W, Linghu Q, Tan H, Guo H.
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Alleviation of water-deficit inhibition of plant growth by rhizosphere microbiota conditioning. [PDF]
Angot V +7 more
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Mastering the balance: BAK1's dual roles in steering plant growth and immunity. [PDF]
Wu Y, Ma Y, Wang W, Zhang S, Wu W.
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Molecular and phenotypic insights into sulfur's role in enhancing tomato plant growth, stress tolerance, and productivity. [PDF]
Lee J +11 more
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The Dose-Dependent Effect of Carbon Quantum Dots as a Photosynthesis Enhancer on Soybean Plant Growth. [PDF]
Wang Q +9 more
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This article attempts to describe the state of the art in building efficient dynamical plant growth and architecture models that contain the basic knowledge coming from botany, ecophysiology, agronomy, applied mathematics, and computer sciences. Plant architecture is the result of two processes working together: plant development, that concerns ...
de Reffye, Philippe +3 more
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Plant hormones, plant growth regulators
Orvosi Hetilap, 2014Plants seem to be rather defenceless, they are unable to do motion, have no nervous system or immune system unlike animals. Besides this, plants do have hormones, though these substances are produced not in glands. In view of their complexity they lagged behind animals, however, plant organisms show large scale integration in their structure and ...
György, Végvári, Edina, Vidéki
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Plant Growth Regulators, Viruses and Plant Growth
1990Virus infection alters plant growth and development. The role of plant growth regulators (PGRs) in control of these processes in diseased plants is reviewed, taking tobacco mosaic virus infections of tobacco and tomato as the main model systems. Growth inhibition was related primarily to severity of visible mosaic symptoms rather than to the extent of ...
R. J. Whenham, R. S. S. Fraser
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Plant-Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria
Annual Review of Microbiology, 2009Several microbes promote plant growth, and many microbial products that stimulate plant growth have been marketed. In this review we restrict ourselves to bacteria that are derived from and exert this effect on the root. Such bacteria are generally designated as PGPR (plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria).
Ben, Lugtenberg, Faina, Kamilova
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