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Enhanced Production by Terra-Sorb® Symbiotic Biostimulant in Two Model Species Under Nitrogen Stress

April 2025
Scientific articles | Terra-Sorb®
Laia Utgés-Minguell, Nuria Sierras-Serra, Cándido Marín, and Marta Pintó-Marijuan
Department of Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environmental Sciences, University of Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona, Spain, Plant Health R&D, Bioiberica, S.A.U, 08389 Palafolls, Spain, Institute of Research in Biodiversity (IRBio), University of Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona, Spain
Plants 2025, 14(7), 108
Inglés

The increasing soil pollution has accelerated the implementation of new agricultural regulations that significantly limit the use of synthetic nitrogen (N) fertilizers. Consequently, plants are likely to experience nutrient stress, leading to decreased productivity and potential threats to food security. To address these critical challenges, microbial-based biostimulant (BS) products, which utilize metabolites from microorganisms, offer a sustainable and eco-friendly solution to mitigate plant nutrient stress. This study evaluated the effects of the radicular application of a microbial-based BS containing L-α-amino acids on lettuce and pepper crops under two nitrogen regimes: optimal N availability and N stress (NS). Various parameters, including growth, production, soluble proteins, photosynthetic pigment content, and oxidative stress markers, were assessed. Under optimal N conditions, BS application enhanced commercial biomass in lettuce and vegetative biomass in pepper, indicating that BSs can reduce the need for nitrate uptake and endogenous amino acid synthesis, thereby conserving energy for other physiological processes. Despite BS application, NS conditions significantly reduced vegetative and reproductive growth in both species. However, BS treatment in pepper plants increased chloroplast pigments, improving light absorption and photosynthetic efficiency. The reduction in the carotenoid/chlorophyll ratio suggests efficient N allocation to growth and production. Thus, BS application proved effective in mitigating NS in pepper plants, enhancing pepper production, while under optimal conditions, it improved lettuce yield, particularly commercial biomass. These findings underscore the potential of symbiotic microbial-based BSs as a promising tool for sustainable agriculture under reduced N availability.

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