Farming with nature

The attention placed on soil health in agriculture has been receiving more and more attention in recent years primarily due to our improved understanding of the interactions between soil health and overall crop performance in both arable and horticultural systems. This has led to increased soil monitoring and analysis as well as the adoption of alternative farming methods such as cover-cropping and min-till plowing to improve overall soil longevity. However, this increased adoption of more sustainable practices is heavily restricted to organic systems as conventional farming continues to be heavily reliant on high-input chemical fertilizers. Thus the presence of native Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi, (AMF) has been steadily decreasing in soils for decades which has only increased our reliance on these high-input chemical systems, further locking us into a business-as-usual model going forwards. As yield loss from pest pressure and disease susceptibility continue to threaten global food security, costing an estimated $300 billion a year, the race to find the best long-term solutions that pragmatically improve whole system resilience to biotic and abiotic factors is in our midst. Could AMF be part of the solution going, forwards? Here is what we know so far and some recent breakthroughs in the science surrounding it.

 

What is AMF?

AMF refers to the group of ancient fungi that have the capacity to symbiote with around 80% of vascular plants. They form unique structures called vesicles or dichotomously branching structures known as arbuscules which are vital sites of nutrient exchange. These Arbuscule Mycorrhizal Fungi (or AMF for short), belong exclusively to the Glomermycota phylum of the fungi kingdom and have been identified as being extremely crucial in the initial colonization of the land by vascular plants and their subsequent evolution, around ~ 460 million years ago.

To form these arbuscules, the fungi penetrate the cortical cells of vascular plant roots that can be inside the root structure (endo) or outside of it (ecto). Arbuscules are sites used for nutrient exchange between the plants’ roots and the hyphae of the fungi in which a multitude of compounds are passed between the two in a sort of mutualistic negotiation that appears to benefit both parties greatly. A few of the exchanged compounds at these sites are sugars, fats, carbon, nitrates, and phosphates. Despite knowing that this exchange is taking place, the relative proportional mechanisms, and directional forces of the exchange remain widely unknown.

Key features

Another key characteristic of AMF is their ability to form vast interconnected webs of mycelium that allow for large-scale chemical communication across vast distances, species, and kingdoms. This also facilitates the transport of nutrients between plants of differing species connected to the mycelial network giving them the ability to access exactly what they need to survive. Meaning that if a single plant is deficient in nutrients, another plant connected to the same network that has a surplus can divert nutrients to the deficient plant via the mycelial web. AMF hyphae have several morphological advantages over plants' roots making them ideal candidates for symbiosis. AMF hyphae have a much higher surface area to volume ratio than plant roots enabling them to have a greater absorptive capacity. Thread-like hyphae can be 100 times longer than plant roots, allowing for much deeper penetration into the soil profile, and granting access to otherwise unreachable pockets of useable resources, in exchange for photosynthetic energy and carbon from the plant.  These hyphal networks greatly benefit overall soil health in terms of structural support and creating channels for air and water. This further affects water availability, air-filled porosity, and dry bulk density of the soil, all linked to a plant's ability to establish and thrive.

Another feature of AMF that could help shed light on its positive impact on soil health is the role of their external hyphae as a stabilizing agent in the formation and maintenance of soil structure through entanglement and enmeshment mechanisms. The glycoprotein Glomalin has been identified as being crucial in giving soil its glue-like properties, released from AMF but so far has not been isolated, only detected in small quantities.

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Regenerative farming looks to optimise the use of the ecological system and environment, in order to benefit from the natural ecosystem services that they provide.

Biostimulants are increasingly available and are now widely marketed to farmers. While the jury is still out on a definitive definition, most definitions of biostimulants explain that they should stimulate plant nutrition processes independently of the product’s nutrient content with the aim of improving one or more of the following characteristics: nutrient efficiency, tolerance to abiotic stress, and/or quality.

Plant growth regulators (PGRs) are synthetic compounds which can be used to reduce lodging in several crop species. 

Soil Fungal Communities Project to establish the level of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) in arable soils across a range of locations, soil types and management systems.

Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and crops can work together for mutual gain. A new PhD studentship report examines how these crop-friendly fungi can be nurtured by management.

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