inoculant
An inoculant is a preparation containing live microorganisms intended to introduce or augment beneficial microbial activity in plants, soils, seeds, or post-harvest substrates. In agriculture, inoculants are used to promote plant growth by fixing atmospheric nitrogen, solubilizing phosphorus, enhancing nutrient uptake, or suppressing pathogens. They may be seed coatings, soil drenches, or mixtures applied to transplants.
Common categories include nitrogen-fixing inoculants for legumes (such as Rhizobium and Bradyrhizobium), phosphate-solubilizing bacteria, and mycorrhizal
Mechanism: beneficial microbes colonize the root zone or tissues, form nodules or networks, fix nitrogen or
Production and quality: products are formulated with carriers such as peat, vermiculite, talc, or liquids. Viability
Limitations and regulation: field performance depends on crop, soil, climate, and compatibility with other inputs. Registered