Jing Li

Jing Li
  • Postdoc researcher
  • Ghent University

Postdoc researcher and project manager at Ghent University with a focus on biostimulant discovery and development

About

12
Publications
1,767
Reads
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167
Citations
Introduction
Current institution
Ghent University

Publications

Publications (12)
Article
Full-text available
In view of improving the circularity and sustainability of crop production, sunflower by-products were extracted using twin-screw extrusion (TSE) to produce sunflower extract, a plant biostimulant that alleviates plant shoot development under salt stress conditions. The TSE process is a thermo-mechano-chemical pre-treatment method for the separatio...
Article
The growing demand for sustainable solutions in agriculture, critical for crop productivity and food quality in the face of climate change and reduced agrochemical usage, has brought biostimulants into the spotlight as valuable tools for regenerative agriculture. Due to their diverse biological activities, biostimulants contribute to crop growth, n...
Article
Full-text available
Sunflower co-products (i.e., stalks and heads) were recently used to create a value chain of sunflower biomass. On the one hand, bioactive ingredients extracted through twin-screw extrusion can be valorized as ecologically friendly agricultural products. On the other hand, in this study, the remaining solid, i.e., the extrudate, was used for obtain...
Article
A collection of by-products was surveyed for novel biostimulant and biopesticide activity by establishing a screening platform (Bio2Bio) that integrated a broad spectrum of in vitro and in planta bioassays. Here, we report plant growth-promoting and biopesticide activities obtained from four solvent extracts of maize distillers' dried grains with s...
Article
Full-text available
A survey of plant-based wastes identified sunflower (Helianthus annuus) bark extract (SBE), produced via twin-screw extrusion, as a potential biostimulant. The addition of SBE to Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seedlings cultured in vitro showed a dose-dependent response, with high concentrations causing severe growth inhibition. However, when p...
Article
Full-text available
Recovering biostimulant compounds from by-products of crops is a promising strategy to add value, enhance sustainability, and increase the environmental safety of the agricultural production chain. Here, we report consistent root and shoot growth-stimulating bioactivity present in water-based extracts from Belgian endive forced roots (Cichorium int...
Article
Full-text available
Photomorphogenic responses of etiolated seedlings include the inhibition of hypocotyl elongation and opening of the apical hook. In addition, dark-grown seedlings respond to light by the formation of adventitious roots (AR) on the hypocotyl. How light signaling controls adventitious rooting is less well understood. Hereto, we analyzed adventitious...
Article
Full-text available
Today's agriculture faces many concerns in maintaining crop yield while adapting to climate change and transitioning to more sustainable cultivation practices. The application of plant biostimulants (PBs) is one of the methods that step forward to address these challenges. The advantages of PBs have been reported numerous times. Yet, there is a gen...
Preprint
Recovering biostimulant compounds from by-products of crops is a promising strategy to add value, enhance sustainability, and increase the environmental safety of the agricultural production chain. Here, we report consistent root and shoot growth-stimulating bioactivity present in water-based extracts from Belgian endive forced roots ( Cichorium in...

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