Effectiveness of growth promoters for the seagrass (Cymodocea nodosa) restoration
Giuliana Marletta, Domenico Sacco, Roberto Danovaro, Silvia Bianchelli

TL;DR
This study explores using growth promoters to improve seagrass restoration by increasing survival and growth of transplanted fragments.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) significantly enhance seagrass fragment survival and growth.
Findings
PGPB increased survivorship of Cymodocea nodosa fragments to 90% compared to 25% in controls.
PGPB significantly promoted new leaf and root formation in seagrass fragments.
Synthetic hormones (PGRs) did not show significant effects on fragment survival or growth.
Abstract
Seagrass meadows are regressing due to the cumulative impacts that affect coastal ecosystems worldwide. Seagrass restoration has been repeatedly proposed to reverse this trend, although with contrasting results due to the difficulty in maintaining the transplanted rhizomes. Enhancing the vegetative propagation of the rhizome plantings (e.g., employing growth-promoters) could represent a reliable tool to increase the success of seagrass restoration. Here we tested the effects of physio-activators, as plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB), and synthetic hormones, as plant growth regulators (PGRs), on a seagrass species to assess their potential utilization to enhance restoration efficiency. We conducted two separate experiments in aquaria on Cymodocea nodosa fragments: in the first one, the fragments were exposed to PGRs for six weeks, while in the second experiment, the fragments were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and coastal plant biology · Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies · Echinoderm biology and ecology
