Publications by authors named "Maaike Perneel"

Article Synopsis
  • Microbe-plant interactions significantly affect crop performance in both soil and hydroponic systems, influenced by the composition of plant-growing media and bacterial inoculation.
  • This study focused on hydroponically grown lettuce, examining how varying materials in plant-growing media and different bacterial inocula impact the root-associated bacterial communities.
  • Results showed that the choice of raw materials and specific bacterial communities can enhance plant growth by promoting microbial diversity, challenging the idea that hydroponic systems are purely sterile environments.
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Vegetables and fruits are an important part of a healthy food diet, however, the eco-sustainability of the production of these can still be significantly improved. European farmers and consumers spend an estimated €15.5 billion per year on inorganic fertilizers and the production of N-fertilizers results in a high carbon footprint.

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The choice of soilless growing medium for plant nutrition, growth and support is crucial for improving the eco-sustainability of the production in horticultural systems. As our current understanding of the functional microbial communities inhabiting this ecosystem is still limited, we examined the microbial community development of the two most important growing media (organic and mineral) used in open soilless horticultural systems. We aimed to identify factors that influence community composition over time, and to compare the distribution of individual taxa across growing media, and their potential functionality.

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In this study, the putative role of phenazines and rhamnolipid-biosurfactants, antagonistic metabolites produced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa PNA1, was tested in the biological control of Pythium splendens on bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L) and Pythium myriotylum on cocoyam (Xanthosoma sagittifolium L Schott). A rhamnolipid-deficient and a phenazine-deficient mutant of PNA1 were used either separately or jointly in plant experiments. When the mutants were applied separately, no disease-suppressive effect was observed, although both mutants still produced one of the antagonistic compounds (phenazines or rhamnolipids).

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Intraspecific variability within 51 isolates of Pythium myriotylum from cocoyam (Xanthosoma sagittifolium) and other host crops was analysed using optimum growth temperature, esterase banding patterns, AFLPs, rDNA-ITS sequencing, and virulence to cocoyam. P. myriotylum isolates virulent to cocoyam could easily be differentiated from other isolates of P.

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