Harnessing Entomopathogenic Fungi: A Meta-Analysis on Their Role as Plant Growth Promoters
· Entomopathogenic fungi (EPF) are widely used as biological agents against a range of insects. This meta-analysis investigates the plant-growth promoting effects of entomopathogenic fungi (EPF) and explores their potential as sustainable alternatives to pesticides and fertilisers. The goal is to determine if EPF generally promote plant growth and whether the fungal genus, inoculation method and dosage modulate these effects.
· We synthesised global data on experimental plant growth responses to EPF colonisation and performed a meta-analysis on 90 studies including 797 paired observations of several important growth metrics.
· Overall, EPF had positive effects on growth with significant increases in plant height, leaf surface area, shoot dry mass, and root mass. Beauveria and Metarhizium were the most commonly reported fungal genera. The inoculation method emerged as a significant moderator for shoot length, fresh mass, and root dry mass with soil application showing the most consistent positive effects. Publication bias was detected, indicating a tendency to report positive results.
· Our results emphasise optimising the application method with compatible EPF for specific crop species or varieties and advocate for further field-based research to understand real-world applications
History
School affiliated with
- School of Natural Sciences (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Plants, People, PlanetPublisher
WileyExternal DOI
eISSN
2572-2611Date Accepted
2025-05-29Date of First Publication
2025-06-18Relevant SDGs
- SDG 2 - Zero Hunger
- SDG 15 - Life on Land
Open Access Status
- Open Access
Date Document First Uploaded
2025-06-02Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?
- N/A