Biostimulant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biostimulants also termed as plant conditioners or bioeffectors are substances, cultures of micro-organism, and mixtures of materials used to promote the growth of crop plants and can include natural or artificial plant growth regulators and biofertilizers. They do not include pesticides or fertilizers. The concept has been developed on the basis of the idea that plants are not isolated entities but are grow within a complex ecosystem involving interactions with multiple organisms and that the strengths of these associations can be modified to enhance plant growth.[1] The definitions vary but an attempted standard definition includes the statement that they are “a formulated product of biological origin that improves plant productivity as a consequence of the novel or emergent properties of the complex of constituents, and not as a sole consequence of the presence of known essential plant nutrients, plant growth regulators, or plant protective compounds.”[2]
It has been suggested that Bioeffector be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since December 2023. |
Although there are no widely-accepted definitions of the term, around eight categories of constituents have been recognized in the literature which include:[3][4]
- Humic substances
- Nitrogenous substances including amino acids
- Non-essential chemical elements
- Inorganic salts
- Seaweed extracts
- Chitin and chitosan derivatives
- Antitranspirants
- Other complex organic materials
A review commissioned by the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board also included biological agents under the definition and defined four categories of these:[5]
- Plant growth promoting bacteria and rhizobacteria
- Non-pathogenic fungi
- Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
- Non-pathogenic protozoa and nematodes