Immediate-to-short term impacts of the project mainly influence the scientific community involved in development of technology interventions for abiotic stress management in agricultural crops. The dissemination is activities are mainly aimed at generating awareness among the academia and research to expand the horizons of the strategy to cover a diverse range of crops, and stress scenarios. Coupled with our ongoing attempts to scale-up the rhizosphere engineering strategy for field-implementation, these efforts are anticipated to strengthen the success of sustainable strategies aimed at smart cultivation.
Long term ecological impact of the outcomes could be clearly identified in terms of strengthened rhizosphere communities with beneficial microbes that could specifically function towards plant performance and resilience. This is mainly due to the use of specific host-derived information on signalling behaviour to encourage the assemblage of indigenous microbiota. Furthermore, in case of exogenous amendment of non-native microbial inputs, this strategy encourages selective characterization of the strains, which subsequently should help maintaining the targeted delivery with the help of signalling moieties, thereby enhancing the functional efficacy.