Breeding Beyond the Genome: Harnessing the Phytobiome for Next-Generation Organic Vegetable Systems

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Abstract

Organic agriculture is at a crossroads, facing the dual challenge of meeting rising consumer demand while enhancing productivity and resilience in the absence of synthetic inputs. For decades, vegetable breeding for organic systems has focused on the plant genome, selecting for traits like pest resistance and nutrient efficiency. While successful, this plant-centric approach overlooks a critical component of agroecological fitness: the phytobiome. Plants are not sterile entities; they are complex holobionts, hosting a vast community of microbes that profoundly influence their health, nutrition, and stress tolerance. This perspective argues for a paradigm shift in organic vegetable breeding—from a focus on the plant alone to a holistic, holobiont-aware approach. We posit that the next leap in organic productivity will come from breeding vegetable varieties that actively recruit and sustain beneficial microbial partnerships. This article deconstructs the unique microbial landscape of organic farms, outlines the key functions the phytobiome provides—from nutrient mobilization to induced systemic resistance—and proposes an integrated framework for breeding "smarter," microbially-attuned vegetables. By merging cutting-edge 'omics' technologies with farmer-centric participatory research, we can design future-proof organic vegetable systems that are not just high-yielding, but also self-regulating, resource-efficient, and truly sustainable. This requires a deep understanding of the holobiont, plant-microbe interactions, root exudates, and the integration of participatory breeding strategies for sustainable intensification.

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