Y. Prin
SupAgro
29 Papers
250 Citations
Y. Prin is an academic researcher from SupAgro. The author has contributed to research in topics: Acacia mangium & Biology. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 29 publications. Previous affiliations of Y. Prin include Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement.
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Papers
Hairy root nodulation of Casuarina glauca: a system for the study of symbiotic gene expression in an actinorhizal tree.
TL;DR: The results indicate that transgenic nodules generated with this root transformation system could facilitate the molecular study of symbiotic nitrogen fixation in actinorhizal trees.
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Rhizosphere microbiota interfers with plant-plant interactions
Arsene Sanon,Z. N. Andrianjaka,Y. Prin,René Bally,Jean Thioulouse,Gilles Comte,Robin Duponnois +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the importance of root exudates in plant interactions, in communications between parasitic plants and their hosts and how some soil microbial components could regulate plant species coexistence and change relationships between plants.
Arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization and nodulation improve flooding tolerance in Pterocarpus officinalis Jacq. seedlings
Laétitia Fougnies,Sabrina Renciot,Félix Muller,Christian Plenchette,Y. Prin,S. M. de Faria,Jean-Marc Bouvet,S. Nd. Sylla,Bernard Dreyfus,Amadou Moustapha Bâ +9 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the development of adventitious roots, aerenchyma tissue, and hypertrophied lenticels may play a major role in flooded tolerance of P. officinalis symbiosis by increasing oxygen diffusion to the submerged part of the stem and root zone, and therefore contribute to plant growth and nutrition.
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The exotic legume tree species, Acacia mearnsii, alters microbial soil functionalities and the early development of a native tree species, Quercus suber, in North Africa
Imene Boudiaf,Ezékiel Baudoin,Hervé Sanguin,Arifa Beddiar,Jean Thioulouse,Antoine Galiana,Y. Prin,C. Le Roux,Michel Lebrun,Robin Duponnois +9 more
TL;DR: The results clearly demonstrated a strong deleterious impact of A. mearnsii invasion level on soil chemical characteristics, microbial functions and EcM community structure and colonization, correlated to a decrease in the early growth of Q. suber seedlings.
Inoculation of Acacia mangium with Alginate Beads Containing Selected Bradyrhizobium Strains under Field Conditions: Long-Term Effect on Plant Growth and Persistence of the Introduced Strains in Soil.
TL;DR: Investigation of the growth response of Acacia mangium to inoculation with selected Bradyrhizobium strains confirmed the long-term positive effect of Aust 13c on plant growth, its high competitive ability against indigenous strains, and its persistence in soil.
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