Senior Research Fellow at CSIR-IIIM, Jammu, working on development of endophytes based biofertilizer and biocontrol agent for sustainable cultivation of Saffron
@airindia Dear Air India,
I reached out my travel agency and raised my refund application to Air India on 22.5.25. However in this respect travel agency didn't get any progress from your end. They advice me to contact Air line and you advice me to contact travel agency.
@airindia You already shared my details with your sales team a month ago, there is no progress since then. I am not here to listen your copy & paste reply every time. Do something meaningful.
@airindia Dear Air India,
I already contacted 2 time on behalf of your message please give me a solid proof as a email to my email id or any documents. So that I can share with the respective travel agency.
@airindia Dear Air India,
How many days you need to share my full refund details to your sales team to travel agency. You promised 7 working days and now its more than 2 weeks.
I just chat with the respective travel agency and they didn't received any full refund request from your side.
@airindia Dear Air India,
I am still waiting from your side for full refund, no confirmation mail, no satisfied reply!
Its now 13 days passed and you promised 7 days. How much I have to wait for full refund.
Our lab has open PhD positions for those with fellowship (CSIR, DBT, UGC etc). If you are interested in exploring diverse aspects of #plant-microbial interactions get in touch. Please RT. Our lab details https://t.co/D0hvRFyYtn @VoicesofIndAcad@IndianBotanists#Rootmicrobiology
Reminder!!! Multiple positions (#RA, #Postdoc, #PhD/predoc) open for our new lab🤩 @GMI_vienna in 2024! 😇We will delve into the hidden molecular secrets of #plant#galls, join us 👉
How hard is it to do science in a language that’s not your first language? We quantified the severity of #languagebarriers for non-native English speakers when reading/publishing papers and attending/presenting at international conferences.
https://t.co/Z6za22rMgg
1/9
📌 PhD Fellowship in Beneficial Plant-Microbe Interactions 🌱🦠at University of Copenhagen in Denmark 🇩🇰... Please Retweet and spread the word! For details visit: https://t.co/zGctgSMAg2
This video shows real-time carbon flows inside a mycorrhizal network.
Mycorrhizal fungi form a symbiotic relationship with ~ 90% of terrestrial plants and have done so for 400 million years.
These specialized fungi provide plants with nutrients and water in exchange for carbon-based exudates the plant produces through photosynthesis.
Current estimates say that between 4 and 20 percent of all CO2 pulled in by plants ends up stored in mycorrhizal tissues.
Considering plants need to build an entire above-ground structure, a root system, and produce flowers, fruits, and seeds, this is an astounding amount of carbon to allocate to mycorrhizal biomass.
A recent review study estimates that global plant communities transfer 13.1 gigatons of CO2 to the underground mycelium of mycorrhizal fungi each year – equivalent to roughly 1/3 of annual CO2 emissions from fossil fuels.
The amount of time the carbon is locked up in fungi’s mycelium remains unknown. Nonetheless, the influx of such a massive amount of carbon into the soil is a boon for soil ecology, nutrient cycling, and the health of water cycles.
It is no wonder the formation of terrestrial ecosystems largely started with the mycorrhizal fungi/plant partnership.
Video credit: @rachaelcargill