Songhao Che
Chinese Ministry of Education
5 Papers
6 Citations
Songhao Che is an academic researcher from Chinese Ministry of Education. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Dictyostelid Cellular Slime Molds from Christmas Island, Indian Ocean.
Pu Liu,Yue Zou,Wenxiu Li,Yu Li,Xinru Li,Songhao Che,Steven L. Stephenson +6 more
- 24 Apr 2019
TL;DR: The diversity and abundance of dictyostelids on Christmas Island appear to be low, which might in part be due to the abundance of land crabs, which considerably reduce the extent of the litter layer on the forest floor.
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The role of the chloroplast localised phosphate transporter GmPHT4;10 gene in plant growth, photosynthesis and drought resistance.
Liwei Liu,Xu He,Shuwen Wang,Xue-Mei Qin,Songhao Che,Lei Wu,Dongchao Wang,Ping Tian,Xiao-ying Wei,Zhihai Wu,Xue Yang,Meiying Yang +11 more
TL;DR: Zhang et al. as discussed by the authors showed that GmPHT4;10 is a member of PHT4 subfamily of phosphate transporters and located in chloroplasts.
Identification, characteristics and rice growth promotion of a highly efficient cellulolytic bacterial strain, Cellulomonas iranensis ZJW-6, isolated from paddy soil in central China
Lei Wu,Songhao Che,Xueting Qin,Yu-Feng Xu,Shiqi Tian,Yuan Zhu,Jian Song,Yunpeng Guan,Dongchao Wang,Meikang Wu,Xue Yang,Zhihai Wu,Meiying Yang +12 more
TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper found that ZJW-6 has an excellent ability to degrade cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin, with cellulose degradation rate reaching almost 50% in 4 days, and Lignin loss rate reaching nearly 30%.
Building microbial consortia to enhance straw degradation, phosphorus solubilization, and soil fertility for rice growth
Songhao Che,Yufeng Xu,Xueting Qin,Shiqi Tian,Jianing Wang,Xueying Zhou,Zhenning Cao,Dong Wang,Meikang Wu,Zhihai Wu,Meiying Yang,Lei Wu,Xue Yang +12 more
TL;DR: A microbial consortium (6+1) enhances straw degradation (48.3% in 7 days) and phosphorus solubilization (117.54 mg/L) in rice growth, outperforming individual strains, and increases soil fertility with significant effects on organic matter, available phosphorus, and nitrogen content.