Micronutrients in Food Production: What Can We Learn from Natural Ecosystems?

: Soil micronutrients limit crop productivity in many regions worldwide, and micronutrient deficiencies affect over two billion people globally. Microbial biofertilizers could combat these is ‐ sues by inoculating arable soils with microorganisms that mobilize micronutrients, increasing their availability to crop plants in an environmentally sustainable and cost ‐ effective manner. However, the widespread application of biofertilizers is limited by complex micronutrient–microbe–plant in ‐ teractions, which reduce their effectiveness under field conditions. Here, we review the current state of seven micronutrients in food production. We examine the mechanisms underpinning microbial micronutrient mobilization in natural ecosystems and synthesize the state ‐ of ‐ knowledge to improve our overall understanding of biofertilizers in food crop production. We demonstrate that, although soil micronutrient concentrations are strongly influenced by soil conditions, land management prac ‐ tices can also substantially affect micronutrient availability and uptake by plants. The effectiveness of biofertilizers varies, but several lines of evidence indicate substantial benefits in co ‐ applying bio ‐ fertilizers with conventional inorganic or organic fertilizers. Studies of micronutrient cycling in nat ‐ ural ecosystems provide examples of microbial taxa capable of mobilizing multiple micronutrients whilst withstanding harsh environmental conditions. Research into the mechanisms of microbial nutrient mobilization in natural ecosystems could, therefore, yield effective biofertilizers to improve crop nutrition under global changes.


Introduction
Human population growth and increasing levels of consumption are placing ever greater demands on farmers to increase crop production [1][2][3].However, land availability for food production is limited, resulting in intensive agricultural practices that affect soil health and the wider environment [2,4].It is therefore vital that global food production is increased sustainably to maintain soil health [4,5].Nutrient availability in soils is one of the key factors underpinning food production [3,6].As well as the more widely researched macronutrients, nitrogen (N), potassium (K) and phosphorus (P), six trace elements are consistently described as important micronutrients for crop growth and yield: iron (Fe), zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn), molybdenum (Mo), boron (B), and copper (Cu) [7][8][9][10].In addition, cobalt (Co) is beneficial to plants and plays a crucial role in nitrogen fixation in leguminous crops [9].For simplicity, we refer henceforth to these seven trace elements as 'micronutrients'.Micronutrients in soils are largely derived from their parent material and required in minimal quantities by crops (i.e., <1 part per million).However, soil properties and conventional agricultural management practices, such as the use of higher yielding crop cultivars and the application of NPK inorganic fertilizers, can result in an insufficient micronutrient supply to crops [7][8][9].A deficiency in even one of these nutrients can substantially reduce crop growth and yield, although an excessive supply, resulting in toxicity, can be equally detrimental [7,8,10].In general, most plants have a narrow optimum micronutrient range, making it difficult to maintain the balance between deficiency and toxicity [7,9,10].Thus, achieving a balanced supply of micronutrients in soils is essential for combatting human and animal dietary deficiencies in many parts of the world.

Micronutrients and Hidden Hunger
It is estimated that over two billion people worldwide suffer from 'hidden hunger', a deficiency in one or more micronutrients [11].Deficiencies in Fe, Zn and Co (in the form of Vitamin B12) are amongst the most prevalent, especially in populations where diets mainly consist of cereals and legumes [12][13][14].Similar micronutrient deficiencies were also noted in livestock and are most often seen in free-ranging herds with reduced supplementary feeding [15].Hidden hunger in livestock and human populations that are heavily dependent upon crop-based foodstuffs demonstrates a clear need to address disparities in the micronutrient uptake and content of crops used in food production.Soil micronutrient content can be enhanced by fertilizer application, but this requires costly repeated applications with variable results and questionable environmental implications [16].The excessive application of micronutrients would pose an equal, if not greater, environmental threat than over-fertilization with macronutrients, since toxicity thresholds for micronutrients are reached at considerably lower doses [7,9,10].Therefore, to address micronutrient deficiency in crop production in a safe and sustainable manner, alternatives to inorganic fertilizer application are needed.

Microbial Biofortification
Biofortification is a promising avenue to address micronutrient deficiencies in agricultural crops.Crop biofortification encompasses a range of strategies that ultimately aim to improve the micronutrient content of crop plants, either by increasing micronutrient availability in arable soils, enhancing plant nutrient uptake, or both [2,16,17].Plant breeding and genetic modification can create new cultivars with enhanced nutrient absorption, but these approaches are often costly, time-consuming and restricted by law [2,3].By contrast, microbial biofortification is a recent strategy involving the enhancement of native soil microbial populations or the inoculation of arable soils with 'microbial biofertilizers' (hereafter biofertilizers) composed of plant growth-promoting microorganisms (PGPMs) [2,6,18,19].Microbial biofortification focuses on enhancing the natural actions of microbes, which improve micronutrient availability and uptake, making it considerably more costeffective, sustainable, and less environmentally damaging [2,16,20,21].Microbial methods are also particularly effective for addressing micronutrient imbalances because they can be used to tackle both toxicity and deficiency [22][23][24].
Although microbial biofortification has evident theoretical benefits, its practical application proves difficult because the approach is underpinned by interactions among micronutrients, microbial communities, and crop species, which are still poorly understood [3,19,20].Finding suitable microbial species for biofertilizers whilst ensuring that arable soil conditions support and enhance their action is particularly challenging.Thus, to ensure the widespread application of biofertilizers, we need to address several key knowledge gaps, such as effectiveness of biofertilizers under field conditions, the impacts of microbial or crop diversity, and the largely unknown effects of introduced microbial species on the native soil microbiota [6,19,20].One way forward is to assess how plant-microbe interactions influence micronutrient availability in semi-natural ecosystems where environmental conditions, microbial communities and plant diversity are highly variable.We can then use this information to identify suitable combinations of microbiota and soil conditions for developing biofertilizers.Therefore, the primary aims of this review are to (i) assess the current state of seven micronutrients in food production, (ii) examine the interactions underpinning microbial biofortification in non-agroecosystems, and (iii) synthesize the state-of-knowledge on micronutrients to improve our overall understanding of microbial biofortification in food crop production.Although it is clear that many of the micronutrients reviewed here can also occur at toxic levels in some soils, our review focuses on micronutrient deficiency in arable soils, hence the exclusion of micronutrients such as chlorine and nickel, for which deficiency rarely occurs and is not as widely researched [25][26][27].We focused on synthesizing the past and current literature to provide an integrative review of micronutrient biofertilizers (following [28]).Our literature search was carried out using Web of Science and Google Scholar, comprising (1) a general search for papers containing the terms 'micronutrient', 'agriculture', 'arable', 'biofertilizer', 'inoculant', 'soil' AND 'microb*' OR 'microorganism' followed by (2) a more specific search for each micronutrient by ecosystem (e.g., soil AND microb* AND iron AND grassland).

Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe) is the most abundant micronutrient and the fourth most abundant element overall in the Earth's crust [29].Aside from parent material weathering, atmospheric deposition and the degradation of organic matter also provide soil Fe inputs to a lesser degree [25,29,30].Iron is an essential component of human nutrition because it is involved in oxygen transport; in plants, Fe is required for enzyme production, photosynthesis, and N metabolism [9].The total concentration of Fe in soils is generally sufficient to meet plant needs, but various soil properties can render the majority of Fe immobile, resulting in low Fe availability in c. 30% of soils worldwide [9,31].Ensuring that crops receive sufficient Fe for optimum growth and yield is achieved by enhancing Fe availability, the efficiency of Fe absorption by crops, or a combination of both.
The availability of Fe in soils is governed by its chemical form, which in turn is dictated by numerous abiotic and biotic factors [9,32,33].Iron primarily exists in ferrous (Fe II) and ferric (Fe III) forms, which can bind to clay fractions abiotically via cation exchange, or precipitate to form oxides, hydroxides and oxyhydroxides, which can render Fe unavailable under neutral or alkaline conditions [25,29].Iron is widely used in biotic microbial redox reactions to yield energy for organic carbon degradation [25,34].The reduction of ferric Fe(III) to ferrous Fe(II), which is more soluble and, therefore, readily available, primarily occurs under anaerobic conditions in water-saturated soils.However, under aerobic conditions, the oxidation of soluble Fe(II) to the more insoluble Fe(III) prevails, reducing Fe availability [25,30,34].Consequently, agricultural management practices that influence soil pH, redox potential, saturation, or aeration can affect the availability of Fe in soils.

Fe Availability and Acquisition in Arable Soils
The greater availability of Fe in acidic soils is one of the key issues in combatting Fe deficiencies in crops because low soil pH conditions are often not beneficial for crop plants and can reduce the availability of other nutrients [9].The use of liming to counteract soil acidification is a common agricultural practice, but for every unit of increase in pH (between pH 4-9) Fe solubility can decrease by up to a thousandfold [8].Other agricultural practices such as tillage and irrigation can affect soil pH by altering aeration and water saturation, which can affect Fe mobilization or immobilization [8,35].Consequently, in cultivated soils that are naturally calcareous, or where management practices alter soil pH, soluble Fe concentrations may be suboptimal for meeting crop requirements [32,33,36].The interaction between soil pH and soil organic matter (hereafter SOM) has a lesser but equally significant impact on Fe availability.Generally, soil Fe retention and availability increases with SOM content, which is problematic in arable soils where SOM is often heavily depleted [8,35,37].Soil organic matter is both a source of Fe and of reducing agents, and hence the microbial mineralisation of SOM increases Fe concentrations and provides the necessary conditions for maximum Fe solubility [8].Organic acids derived from SOM can increase Fe availability by reducing soil pH and by forming soluble Fe complexes [8,33].However, other compounds in SOM can bind Fe to form increasingly insoluble organo-mineral complexes as soil pH increases [8,9,33].Nonetheless, arable soils with low SOM content are more likely to be susceptible to Fe loss or fixation to stable compounds [8,35,37].
As well as the indirect impacts of alterations to soil conditions, arable management practices also directly influence Fe availability.In many countries, the application of inorganic fertilizers to correct Fe deficiency in crops has become increasingly common [9].However, increasing Fe application may have a limited effect on heavily limed or naturally calcareous soils because the high soil pH favours Fe oxidation to insoluble forms.The application of organic fertilizers (e.g., farmyard manure) declined in recent decades with the widescale movement away from mixed farming [38], but preliminary evidence supports their use to combat Fe deficiency, which warrants further investigation [39].Hence, soil management to increase Fe availability is possible, but when the necessary changes to soil conditions cannot be accomplished, deficiencies can instead be addressed by altering the nutrient acquisition strategies of plants and microbes.

Fe Acquisition by Crops: Strategies and Efficiency
Two factors can interfere with acquisition and use of Fe by crops, even when Fe availability in soils is not limiting.Firstly, plant breeding to increase crop yield and improve resistance to pathogens or pests can select for traits that increase the plant's micronutrient requirements, creating Fe deficiencies, even though soil Fe availability was considered sufficient for past cultivars [9].Secondly, the application of herbicides such as glyphosate, diclofop-methyl and chlorsulfuron can interfere with root growth and Fe translocation from the roots to shoots and grain, resulting in plant Fe deficiency [33,40,41].Plants employ two strategies to improve Fe acquisition under deficient conditions (Figure 1).Strategy I, used by nongraminaceous monocots and dicots (e.g., legumes), involves the release of protons into the rhizosphere, which increases soil acidity and mobilizes ferric Fe(III).Enzymes (chelate reductases) at the root-soil interface then reduce Fe(III) to ferrous Fe(II), which can be absorbed by the plant via ferrous transporters [29,42,43].Strategy II plants are graminaceous monocots (e.g., grasses and cereal crops); the plants exude Fe-chelating organic substances (phytosiderophores), which form complexes with Fe(III) that plants can then absorb via plasma membrane transport systems without reduction [29,42,43].Although strategy I plant species mobilize Fe by adjusting unfavourable soil pH, this method is less effective in well-aerated calcareous soils and is considered less efficient overall than the method utilised by strategy II plants [42,44].Phytosiderophores can be exuded in large quantities by strategy II plants and are capable of chelating Fe regardless of pH.However, phytosiderophores are only released diurnally, with production peaking a few hours after dawn, and can be rapidly decomposed by certain microbial taxa [42,44,45].Furthermore, when Fe availability is low, plants and soil microbes can compete for available Fe, which has prompted increased research into microbial strategies for increasing Fe availability [29,43,45].

Fe Mobilization by Microbes
Iron is widely used in microbial redox reactions to yield energy for organic carbon degradation [33,45,46].The dissimilatory reduction of Fe(III) to Fe(II) occurs under anaerobic conditions, and microbes can also perform assimilatory Fe reduction under aerobic conditions both indirectly via acidification of the rhizosphere and directly by producing siderophores [33,45,46].Microbial siderophores function in the same way as phytosiderophores but are considerably more efficient, possessing a greater stability and a higher affinity for forming Fe(III) complexes [33,46,47].To date, over 500 types of microbial siderophores have been identified, with many microbial taxa capable of producing or utilising multiple types [33,43,47].The strong affinity of microbial siderophores for Fe allows them to compete with plants by 'stealing' Fe from low-affinity phytosiderophores [33,45,47].Despite this capability, numerous studies demonstrated a beneficial relationship between the presence of PGPMs and Fe accumulation by plants [43,[48][49][50].
Microbial biofortification of Fe in plants can occur via several mechanisms: the presence of PGPMs can induce increased root hair proliferation and branching, trigger plant biochemical responses to Fe limitation, and prevent Fe acquisition by phytopathogenic microbes [43,[48][49][50].In addition, there is also considerable evidence that plants can utilise microbial siderophores, which appear to be dictated by the plants' Fe acquisition strategies.Chelate reductases in the roots of strategy I plants are capable of accepting Fe(III) complexes from microbial siderophores for reduction, producing freely available Fe(II), which can provide a significant fraction of plant Fe requirements [33,42,48].The utilisation of microbial siderophores by strategy II plants is more variable due to the competition between microbial siderophores and phytosiderophores.However, some microbial siderophores, such as rhizoferrin, have an Fe affinity equal to phytosiderophores; therefore, they can act as an additional source of Fe to strategy II plants, either by direct uptake of Fe from microbial siderophores by the plant or (to a greater extent) Fe exchange from microbial siderophores to phytosiderophores [33,42,50,51].Therefore, microbial biofortification could significantly improve crop Fe acquisition if the selected PGPMs induce plant responses to Fe limitation or produce siderophores that promote plant Fe uptake.

Fe in Natural Ecosystems
Studies of biotic interactions with Fe in (semi-)natural ecosystems provide valuable insights into microbial taxa suitable for biofertilizers because the soils, microbial communities, and vegetation have been much less affected by human activities than in agroecosystems [35,37,52].Forest soils received considerable attention for bioprospecting, most likely because they possess high microbial diversity [35,37,52], which increases the likelihood of finding suitable PGPMs.Numerous dissimilatory Fe-reducing bacterial taxa isolated from tropical forest soils are already acclimated to periodic waterlogging [53][54][55], providing an insight into how microbial Fe reduction may be influenced by soil aeration or water saturation.Fluctuations in Fe redox reactions in tropical forest soils closely follow rainfall patterns, with long dry periods leading to increased aeration and decreased Fe reduction [56].Thus, biofertilizers based on taxa from tropical soils may be best applied immediately after rainfall or irrigation to maximise Fe reduction, and thus crop Fe acquisition.However, since many tropical forest soils are rich in Fe, microbial taxa isolated from tropical soils might not be suitable for soils with limited Fe availability.Instead, taxa capable of siderophore production under Fe-limited conditions may prove more effective.Siderophore-producing microbes isolated from the soils of montane forest ecosystems are not only capable of increasing Fe availability and acquisition but can do so even when exposed to extreme environmental stress [57,58].Although research into the utilisation of these microbial species as biofertilizers only began in the last decade, preliminary results indicate significant potential for their application in combatting Fe deficiency in arable crops [57,58].
Other ecosystems exposed to extreme or fluctuating temperatures are potential sources of microbial taxa for novel biofertilizers, especially for use in agroecosystems in colder climates.Bacterial strains capable of producing siderophores at both low (e.g., 4 °C) and relatively high (e.g., 30 °C) temperatures were isolated from cold deserts and glaciers [59,60].Surprisingly, grassland ecosystems received less attention as potential sources of biofertilizers, although siderophore-producing fungal species may be sourced from grassland soils [61].Many fungal species from Ascomycota and Basidiomycota can produce the siderophore ferricrocin, which plants can utilise to obtain Fe; however, some of these fungal species are pathogenic, and so a careful separation from PGPM species is required [61].
Finally, research into the degradation of SOM in natural ecosystems could be informative because microbial SOM mineralisation under water-saturated conditions releases Fe from organic complexes and increases the availability of soluble organic carbon [54,56].As the amount of SOM in agroecosystems is often limited [35,37,42], the effects of organic matter applications on Fe availability in arable soils are still unclear.Nonetheless, studies in forest and grassland soils demonstrate that Fe reduction increases with the availability of labile carbon due to its stimulatory effects on microbial activity [53,54,62].Even at higher soil pH, Fe reduction can be further enhanced by regular additions of organic carbon, especially under anaerobic conditions [53,54].As SOM can also act as a source of soluble Fe, the addition of organic fertilizers to arable soils could significantly and sustainably increase Fe availability to crops, with or without biofertilizers.

Zinc (Zn)
Zinc (Zn) deficiency is now considered a global-scale crisis, and correcting its low availability in arable soils has become a widely researched topic [9,[63][64][65].In plants, Zn is essential for growth [9,65], heat stress tolerance [63], pathogen resistance, and reproduction [64,66].In humans, Zn is a vital component of DNA, RNA and over 300 bodily enzymes, with evidence also suggesting a role in gene expression [63,67].However, many countries reported extensive Zn deficiency in arable soils [63], which not only leads to yield reductions of up to 80%, but to widespread Zn deficiency in approximately one third of the global human population, especially in populations dependent on cereal-based diets [64,68].
Zinc levels in soils are maintained by atmospheric inputs, which generally exceed outputs or losses via leaching and biological uptake [25,69].However, although the total Zn concentrations in most soils appear sufficiently high to meet plant needs, approximately 90% of Zn in soils worldwide is thought to exist in a form unavailable to plants [25,64,66], and c. 30-50% of soils possess insufficient available Zn to meet plant requirements [25,66,70].Unlike some other micronutrients, Zn can persist in numerous free ionic forms and complexes with other metals, as well as in crystalline forms bound to clay fractions and as a component of insoluble or soluble (organic) complexes.As such, soil type and soil properties also have a strong impact on Zn levels, with lower Zn concentrations in sandy soils and higher concentrations in organic and calcareous soils [25,69].Zinc availability declines with increasing pH due to increased fixation in soil minerals and the formation of insoluble Zn compounds (e.g., hydroxides, calcium zincate) in soils with pH > 7.5.Therefore, in highly calcareous or heavily limed soils, Zn availability and uptake by crops is greatly limited [9,25,71].Aside from liming, several other arable management practices can also reduce Zn availability [23,63]: excessive P fertilization can interfere with plant Zn acquisition and applying organic material with a high ligand content can reduce Zn availability via the formation of insoluble organo-mineral complexes [9,66,70].Furthermore, flooding (e.g., in rice paddies) and the selection of crop cultivars with high Zndemand can also result in insufficient Zn availability [9,63,66].
Although plants are capable of chelating Zn in the same way as Fe through rhizospheric acidification and the production of phytosiderophores, these plant strategies are often insufficient for addressing Zn deficiencies [19,63,64].Consequently, the application of inorganic Zn fertilizers is common practice in many countries, with one application theoretically providing enough Zn to last for up to six crop rotations [63].However, due to the rapid fixation and immobilization of Zn in most soils, only 1-20% of the applied Zn is absorbed by crops, rendering this approach financially costly and environmentally unsustainable [63,71,72].Therefore, research efforts turned to developing biofertilizers that can mobilize insoluble Zn pools already present in soils [3,63,66].

Zn Mobilization by Microbes
The microbial biofortification of crops with Zn received extensive research and is hailed as the most promising solution to Zn deficiency in arable agriculture [3].The crop uptake of Zn via microbial siderophores is far less difficult to implement than Fe uptake [3,19,66]; numerous bacterial strains, as well as arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and fungal species from the genus Trichoderma, can acidify the rhizosphere through organic acid or proton release and produce siderophores that enable them to solubilize Zn [3,19,21,64].Furthermore, endophytic fungal species such as AMF produce hyphae capable of physically accessing Zn pools that plant roots would otherwise be unable to reach; the chelated Zn is absorbed into the hyphal network and transported directly back to the plant's roots [3,19,64].Due to the efficiency and effectiveness of microbial Zn solubilization, the application of biofertilizers successfully alleviated Zn deficiency in many crops [3,64,66].
In soils where Zn deficiency is caused by low concentrations of total Zn rather than low availability, the application of Zn fertilizers in combination with biofertilizers prevents the applied Zn from being instantly immobilized [73][74][75].Using this dual application, farmers can biofortify their crops whilst applying less Zn, which is more financially and environmentally sustainable [75,76].However, the highly variable sensitivity of microbes to Zn toxicity and variable microbial responses among taxa can limit the co-application of biofertilizers and conventional Zn fertilizers [77,78].Zinc nano-fertilizers were recently suggested as a more sustainable alternative, with successful crop Zn deficiency remediation at low application rates, and either neutral or positive impacts on native soil microbiota [79][80][81][82].In summary, the co-application of Zn nano-fertilizers with biofertilizers could present a way to alleviate crop Zn deficiencies, while maintaining healthy soil microbial communities.However, although numerous Zn-solubilizing microbes were identified, some strains may be more effective than others under given environmental conditions.Therefore, natural ecosystems remain an important potential source for new and alternative Zn-biofortifying microbes.

Lessons for Zn Biofortification
As Zn is one of the most common heavy metals in municipal waste, sewage, and composted residues [83,84], research investigating soil Zn concentrations in semi-natural ecosystems mostly focuses on issues of contamination, and studies of Zn-solubilizing microbes are few and far between.However, two studies offer some valuable insights into the efficacy of biofertilizers.A study of the effects of historical sewage sludge application on microbial communities in grassland and arable soils showed that altered microbial community structure was associated with elevated soil Zn concentrations, even 11 years after the final sewage application [85].Hence, substantial past Zn fertilizer additions to arable soils could affect the effectiveness of biofertilizers, a potential issue that warrants further investigation.A study in desert soils identified two bacterial strains in the roots of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) plants, which were capable of significantly increasing plant Zn uptake [86].Bacteria sourced from such a harsh environment could be used to create biofertilizers with greater resistance to extreme temperatures and drought.Hence, the bioprospecting of semi-natural ecosystems may yield further Zn-solubilizing species to create biofertilizers for arable food production under challenging environmental conditions [86].

Boron (B) and Molybdenum (Mo)
The co-limitation by boron (B) and molybdenum (Mo) is common in leguminous crops [87][88][89].Food crop deficiencies in B and Mo occur worldwide, but leguminous (e.g., beans, peas, lentils) and other dicotyledon crops (e.g., sunflower, oilseed rape) are typically more prone to B and Mo deficiency than cereal crops, whereas fruiting tree and vine species are susceptible to B deficiency alone [9,89,90].Boron deficiency can disrupt crop growth, reduce crop yield, elongate roots, and reduce root nodulation in legumes [9,89,91].However, the biological function of B in humans is yet to be established, and B deficiency is rarely (if ever) recorded [92].Molybdenum deficiency in crops also disrupts growth and reduces yield, affecting N fixation and the production of multiple enzymes, including those that facilitate P uptake [9,93,94].The deficiency of Mo in humans can occur and is linked to oral, throat and gastric cancers; however, its prevalence is extremely low [95,96].Therefore, in the context of food production, B and Mo deficiencies are a more significant issue for crop growth and yield than for human nutrition.
Soil pH is the primary factor controlling the availability of B and Mo; Mo availability increases with pH, whereas B availability tends to increase up to pH 7, and then declines [30,97].Under acidic conditions, B is highly mobile and prone to leaching, but under alkaline conditions it forms insoluble complexes with SOM and (oxy-)hydroxides or becomes fixed onto clay fractions [9,25,30].Conversely, Mo is readily available in a pH range of 7.5-9 but becomes fixed to SOM and Fe hydroxides under acidic conditions [9,25,98].Therefore, B deficiency is typically observed in calcareous or heavily limed soils and sandy soils prone to leaching, whereas Mo deficiency is common in acidic and heavily leached soils.These differences in the availability of B and Mo create issues for alleviating the deficiencies of one nutrient in arable soils, whilst controlling for the toxicity of the other.However, low B and Mo availability in arable soils is a more common and widespread issue than toxicity [9,89,98].Since B and Mo availability is primarily controlled by soil pH and leaching, arable management practices affecting these two soil conditions, such as liming, irrigation and tillage, can affect their availability [9,25,[98][99][100].Low SOM content in conventional arable systems reduces the availability of both nutrients, and thus the addition of organic matter can increase both B and Mo availability via the formation of soluble complexes, [25,99,101].

Microbial B and Mo Requirements
Soil microbes facilitate the release of B and Mo through organic matter degradation and mobilization from insoluble complexes [102].Bacteria and fungi require B and Mo to produce numerous enzymes, and these micronutrients also play very specific roles in the symbiotic relationship between leguminous plant species and rhizobial bacteria [89,102], in which the rhizobia fix and convert atmospheric N to ammonia [91,103,104].Rhizobia infect the roots of legumes by suppressing the plant's pathogenic defences using polysaccharides attached to their cell surface.In B-deficient rhizobia, polysaccharide synthesis is reduced by approximately 65-80%, which hinders infection and limits the successful establishment of the symbiotic relationship [91,105].Furthermore, as Mo is an essential component of nitrogenase, the N-fixing enzyme produced by rhizobia, Mo-limited bacteria fail to supply N to the plant [95,98,106].Hence, microbial deficiency in either of these micronutrients can substantially reduce leguminous crop growth and yield [89,98].

Management of B and Mo in Arable Soils
The application of B and Mo as inorganic fertilizers was used to correct deficiencies in arable soils and food crops worldwide [9].Inorganic B can be applied by seed priming, or directly to soils or foliage.Seed priming is cost-effective but less successful for fortification, whereas foliar application corrects deficiency in crops but not in soil microbes [9,100,107].Soil B application is very effective for increasing crop yield, fortifying grain, and increasing microbial activity and abundance under optimal soil conditions, but the quantities and chemical form of the applied B must be carefully monitored to prevent toxicity [100,102,108].Additionally, in calcareous or heavily limed soils, most of the applied inorganic B is likely to rapidly become unavailable, rendering this method both costly and ineffective [100,101].Inorganic Mo fertilizer is often applied either in combination with, or as an accidental contaminant of, other fertilizers, but can also be applied separately as a foliar spray [9,109].Foliar Mo spray can fortify leguminous crops and enable symbiotic translocation of Mo to the rhizobia colonizing their roots, increasing root nodulation by more than 50% [98].However, in acidic soils, foliar application is much less effective and does not provide Mo for free-living microbes in the soil, which may be important for non-leguminous crops [98,110].
Low B and Mo availability in soils might be best alleviated by combining inorganic fertilizers with biofertilizers.For example, the co-application of inorganic B fertilizer and biofertilizers produced the greatest increase in broccoli growth, yield, and weight [111].The joint application of inorganic Mo fertilizer and biofertilizers can boost soil microbial activity, increase yield, and quadruple root nodulation in leguminous crops [88,112,113].Thus, the co-application of biofertilizers with inorganic fertilizers offers a promising way to combat B and Mo deficiencies in both food crops and soil microbial communities.However, few (if any) microbial taxa were found to be capable of increasing B and Mo availability or uptake in arable soils without the co-addition of inorganic fertilizers.

B and Mo in Natural Ecosystems
Given the clear requirements of soil microorganisms for both micronutrients, bioprospecting in natural ecosystems could yield microbial taxa suitable for application as biofertilizers [109,114,115].Studies relating to the microbial usage and mobilization of B in natural ecosystems are limited and have yet to yield B-mobilizing microbial taxa [57,58].Research into Mo-mobilizing taxa in natural ecosystems is also limited, but it is possible that free-living, N-fixing microbes in forest soils are capable of releasing chelating agents to acquire Mo for nitrogenase production [116], and there is evidence that Azotobacter vinelandii produces a Mo-chelating siderophore or 'molybdophore' [117].Hence, there is still much work to be carried out to identify and characterize the microbial acquisition of B and Mo in natural ecosystems, but such research could yield microbial strains suitable for use as biofertilizers.

Manganese (Mn)
Manganese (Mn) is essential for most living organisms and is required by all plants for photosynthesis, chloroplast breakdown and synthesis, and enzyme structure and function [25,118,119].In humans, Mn is needed for reproduction, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, and neurological functioning [120].Crops grown for food production are the primary source of Mn for humans, providing over 50% of our dietary intake [118,121].Although Mn deficiency has not yet been observed in the human population [120], it occurs in c. 10% of arable soils worldwide; global fruit, cereal, and certain vegetable crops are all prone to Mn deficiency, which causes interveinal leaf chlorosis and necrotic spotting, reduced tillering, the inhibition of root growth, stunted plant growth and suboptimal nutrient assimilation [9,25,118,121].As such, correcting Mn deficiency is vital for maintaining crop yields, food production and human Mn intake [118,121].
Manganese is the fifth most abundant metal and twelfth most abundant element in soils, and thus the total concentrations are often sufficient to meet plant requirements [120].However, Mn availability decreases at soil pH > 7.5 as it adsorbs strongly into various (hydr-)oxides, clay fractions, organic compounds, and calcium carbonate [25].Consequently, Mn deficiency typically occurs in arable crops grown in calcareous or heavily limed soils [9,25,118,121].However, even under alkaline conditions, Mn-containing organo-mineral and anionic complexes can remain relatively soluble and contribute to Mn availability for plants and microbes [25].In soils with pH < 5.5, Mn adsorption is greatly reduced and its availability to plants and microbes increases [25,119].However, soil aeration also strongly influences Mn availability by affecting the microbial oxidation or reduction of Mn.Under aerobic conditions, the oxidation of Mn(II) to Mn(III), and then to Mn(IV) by bacteria and fungi, reduces its availability; under anaerobic conditions, Mn is reduced, which increases its availability [25,122].Hence, arable management practices that alter soil pH or aeration (e.g., reduced organic matter application, tillage, and irrigation) can cause substantial losses of Mn by leaching [25].Finally, the application of herbicides, such as glyphosate, can inhibit crop acquisition of Mn [9,25,118,121].Hence, arable management can substantially influence Mn availability by altering abiotic and biotic soil factors.
When soil Mn availability becomes limiting, crop plants employ alternative measures to acquire sufficient Mn for their biological functions [123,124].Plants can acquire Mn in much the same way as Fe, either via acidification of the rhizosphere (strategy I) or the release of phytosiderophores (strategy II) [123,124].However, Mn mobilization by organic acids released into the rhizosphere is relatively low [123] and phytosiderophore affinity for Mn is weak; therefore, other micronutrients are more likely to be chelated in place of Mn [124].Consequently, the plant acquisition of Mn is heavily dependent on soil pH, aeration, and microbial Mn reduction, and agricultural intervention is required to fortify crops with Mn in arable soils where these factors are unfavourable [25,71,123].

Management of Mn in Arable Soils
The use of inorganic fertilizers has become common practice for correcting Mn deficiency in arable crops worldwide [9,118,121].The soil application of inorganic Mn is perhaps most prevalent due its low cost and ease of implementation, but foliar application is far more effective for supporting crop growth, increasing yield, and fortifying grains with Mn, although multiple applications are required [9,121].Seed coating (with Mn) and osmopriming (seed soaking in Mn solution) were trialled in rice and wheat crops, with coating being better for crop growth and osmopriming boosting yields close to or greater than foliar applications [118,121].However, the effectiveness of all Mn application methods varies depending on the target crop [118,121], and not all methods are affordable for farmers on lower incomes [9].Furthermore, aside from foliar application, the uptake of inorganic Mn fertilizers by crops can still be greatly limited when glyphosate is applied [9].The inclusion of leguminous crops, legume intercropping, or legumes in herbal ley rotations can increase Mn availability for subsequent arable crops by reducing soil pH; however, these practices have fallen out of favour in many countries [1,125,126].Overall, the widespread application of inorganic Mn fertilizers is often financially unsustainable and frequently ineffective.However, inorganic Mn fertilizers may be unnecessary where total soil Mn concentrations are high but inaccessible to plants, since biofertilizers could substantially increase plant access to Mn.
Biofertilizers capable of fortifying crops with Mn can be split into two groups: Mnmobilizing fungal taxa and Mn-reducing rhizobacteria.Crop inoculation with AMF or fungal taxa applied as biopesticides is thought to aid Mn availability and acquisition by acidifying the rhizosphere and promoting numerous plant growth traits [127,128], although evidence for its effectiveness is mixed.Inoculation with fungal taxa alone does not significantly increase plant Mn acquisition [127], and the co-inoculation of AMF and Mnreducing rhizobacteria can even reduce Mn uptake, possibly because AMF suppress Mn-reducing rhizobacterial populations [128,129].However, the inoculation with Mn-reducing rhizobacteria alone can greatly improve Mn availability and acquisition by crops, and aid in the control of rhizosphere phytopathogens such as take-all fungal species, Rhizoctonia fungi and Fusarium wilt fungi [6,71,[128][129][130][131].It should be noted, however, that Mn-reducing rhizobacterial strains were primarily tested at soil pH < 7.5 [6,128,129,131], and few studies tested their effectiveness under alkaline conditions [132].Therefore, further testing should focus on assessing the efficacy of rhizobacteria for improving Mn acquisition in alkaline soils, as well as the use of Mn-mobilizing AMF.Nonetheless, biofertilizers comprising Mn-reducing rhizobacteria are highly promising for combatting Mn deficiency in food crops.

Mn in Natural Ecosystems
The utilization of Mn by fungi and bacteria in forest ecosystems provides some useful insights into the potential issues surrounding the use of microbes for crop biofortification [133][134][135][136]. Manganese plays a key role in litter decomposition by fungi, which typically use Mn for two key functions: as a structural component for lignin-degrading enzymes, such as Mn-peroxidase, and as an electron receiver/donator during the decomposition process [133,137].Initially, fungi acquire either free Mn(II) from easily-degradable fractions of leaf litter or source Mn from the surrounding soil to synthesize enzymes, but if Mn concentrations are insufficient, the fungi compete with plants to acquire Mn [133].Furthermore, during the later stages of litter degradation, Mn is cycled enzymatically between readily available Mn(II) and stabilized Mn(III) to oxidize, and thus degrade, lignin [134][135][136][137].The effect that this redox cycling has on the Mn availability for plants is unclear, but since readily available Mn(II) is thought to be the predominant form of Mn in fresh leaf litter, its (albeit temporary) conversion to unavailable Mn(III) could limit Mn availability to plants [137].Finally, once leaf litter degradation is complete, Mn accumulates in the form of Mn(III), which, under aerobic conditions, is oxidized to Mn(IV), further limiting its availability to plants [136,137].Although research into Mn use by AMF in natural ecosystems is limited, there are likely to be some similarities with Mn use by fungal decomposers [138].Overall, if AMF Mn cycling in agroecosystems is similar to the fungal cycling of Mn during litter decomposition, it might explain why the application of AMF as biofertilizers can reduce Mn availability to food crops [129].
It was recently discovered that certain strains of bacteria in soils are also capable of oxidizing Mn(II) to yield energy and to protect themselves from harsh environmental conditions via the formation of Mn(III/IV) oxide casings [122,137].However, most research into Mn-reducing strains of rhizobacteria was conducted in agroecosystems [128,129,132].Therefore, bioprospecting in the soils of semi-natural ecosystems could yield more Mnreducing rhizobacteria suitable for application as biofertilizers.

Cobalt (Co)
Cobalt (Co) is considered essential for livestock and humans [9,25,139], and although Co is not essential to plants, it is widely regarded as beneficial [140].In plants, Co is involved in multiple processes, including stem growth, leaf expansion, and bud development [140].Cobalt is also required for the activation of several enzymes, including those involved in N-fixation in legumes, and is thus particularly beneficial to leguminous crops [9,139,[141][142][143].Importantly, bacteria and archaea are the only organisms capable of utilizing Co to produce cobalamin, also known as vitamin B12, a vital nutrient for mammals, which causes pernicious anaemia in humans suffering from its deficiency [9,144,145].The primary reason for poor vitamin B12 production in leguminous crops is the deficiency of Co in the soil [146].
Cobalt availability is not primarily dictated by soil pH [25,139].Although increasing soil pH can reduce Co availability, other soil factors, such as Fe or Mn hydrous oxide abundance, SOM content, soil texture, Mn concentrations, and microbial activity, can equally affect Co availability [25,139,147,148].Since Co is not essential for crop growth, and microbial requirements for this micronutrient are low, Co availability in soils is usually sufficient, and Co deficiency is rarely recorded outside the livestock sector [25,139,149].However, it is important to note that soil contamination from roadside emissions, industrial processes, and sludge application (as an arable management practice) can all result in soil Co concentrations reaching toxic, and eventually biocidal, levels [25,150].Therefore, the careful management of Co in arable soils is required to ensure microbial and crop plant uptake of these micronutrients is sufficient without becoming excessive, a function that could be fulfilled by biofertilizers.

Microbial Management of Co in Arable Soils
To date, there is no research into biofertilizers for managing Co availability in arable soils, even though there are clear links between Co availability and microbial activity.Microbes are thought to induce Co mobilization indirectly by altering soil pH and reducing Fe/Mn hydrous oxides via redox reactions, which inadvertently released precipitated Co [139,151].Depending on whether Co availability is limiting or approaching toxic levels, microbes can directly mobilize or immobilize Co to facilitate or reduce its uptake by organisms regardless of pH, but the mechanisms that microbes employ to achieve this are still unclear [147][148][149]151].The quality of SOM could also affect the microbial mobilization of Co because readily available carbon sources can increase microbial activity, and thus Co mobilization, whereas more complex organic compounds have the opposite effect [148,151].Consequently, the application of appropriate organic fertilizers could both enhance Co availability when it becomes limiting and reduce Co mobilization when Co toxicity inhibits microbial activity or crop growth.Finally, there is also some evidence to suggest that crop plants can alter the composition of the rhizosphere community to promote taxa that express genes for Co resistance, which could mitigate Co toxicity [152].The strong evidence for the microbial control of Co in soils suggests that novel biofertilizers could prove highly effective for managing Co availability, especially if interactions between crop type and biofertilizers are taken into account.

Copper (Cu)
Copper holds a unique role in arable agriculture because, unlike other micronutrients, it is applied both to correct deficiency and as a pesticide [25].The use of Cu as a pesticide is one of the causes of widespread soil contamination with Cu [25,153,154], but here we focus on Cu deficiency and the role of biofertilizers for maintaining favourable soil Cu availability.
Copper is essential for numerous crucial biological processes.Copper deficiency is the leading nutritional deficiency in agricultural animals globally, and recent research links Cu deficiency in humans to ischemic heart disease, osteoporosis, and Alzheimer's disease [155].In plants, Cu plays a role in reproduction, photosynthesis, and disease resistance, and Cu deficiency causes stunted crop growth, yields reductions of up to 20%, and reduces grain or fruit quality [9,25].Crop deficiency in Cu can occur in soils with low Cu concentrations or low availability [9,25,156].The low availability of Cu is often a result of leaching, but also occurs at neutral or alkaline pH levels and in soils with a high SOM content [9,25,154,156].The biotic complexation of Cu with SOM and the abiotic adsorption of Cu onto SOM, (oxy-)hydroxides, clay fractions, and carbonates have the greatest impact on Cu availability because complexation and adsorption reduce the overall Cu solubility [9,25,154].Approximately 20-40% of arable soils have a low Cu availability, which can be exacerbated by cultivating crops that are sensitive to Cu deficiency (e.g., cereals, vegetables, citrus trees), liming, the application of macronutrient fertilizers, and the increased availability of other micronutrients (e.g., Mn, Zn, Fe) [9,25,156].

Solutions for Cu Deficiency
A prevalent solution to Cu deficiency in arable soils is the application of Cu fertilizers or pesticides, repeated as and when they are needed [9].However, since this approach is partly to blame for widespread Cu accumulation and the subsequent toxicity in arable soils, agronomists are exploring more sustainable alternatives.For example, nanoparticle fertilizers and pesticides release Cu into soils at a slow but continuous rate, requiring fewer applications and potentially reducing environmental impacts [157,158].However, environmental conditions and arable management practices can affect the efficacy of Cu nanoparticles to the point where detrimental impacts on soil microbial communities are observed [158,159].By contrast, there is little research into biofertilizers to address Cu deficiencies in agricultural crops.Studies addressing the microbial biofortification of multiple micronutrients identified numerous taxa capable of increasing Cu availability and biofortifying crop plants with Cu [20,127,131,160].Since many soil microbes require Cu as an enzyme cofactor, it is plausible that such species would be efficient Cu mobilizers, although more research into their underlying mechanisms is required [79,161].Overall, biofertilizers could provide a sustainable method for biofortifying arable food crops with Cu, but their development is currently limited by a paucity of information on microbial Cu mobilization.

Conclusions
Numerous environmental factors and intensive agricultural practices can contribute to low micronutrient availability in arable soils, but biofertilizers offer an effective and sustainable way of fortifying crops with micronutrients to improve growth and yield, as well as alleviating hidden hunger in the global human population (Figure 2).Inorganic fertilizers can be costly, unsustainable, and often ineffective, but microorganisms capable of increasing micronutrient acquisition by plants can be used to produce biofertilizers and fortify food crops.By synthesizing the literature, we drew three key conclusions to guide future research and the refinement of biofertilizers (Figure 2): (1) Microbial functional groups suitable for use as biofertilizers will differ depending on the micronutrient in question, and biotic interactions could undermine their effec-tiveness.Research to identify microorganisms for developing new micronutrient biofertilizers should not only characterize the mechanisms microbes employed to mobilize and acquire micronutrients, but also assess potential interactions among different microbial functional groups and ascertain the potential for plant-microbial nutrient competition.(2) The co-application of biofertilizers with inorganic fertilizers proves effective for treating deficiencies of Zn, B, and Mo, and reduces the amount of inorganic fertilizers needed.Substituting conventional inorganic fertilizers with nano-fertilizers is a growing area of interest, and research into their co-application with biofertilizers could reduce the associated risks of toxicity.Although the co-application of biofertilizers with organic fertilizers is under-researched, work on microbial interactions with easily degradable SOM in natural ecosystems suggests that the co-application of biofertilizers and organic fertilizers could boost microbial activity and micronutrient availability.(3) Finally, bioprospecting in natural ecosystems is a potential source of novel microbial taxa that are both capable of mobilizing numerous micronutrients and withstanding harsh environmental conditions.Biofertilizers, including such organisms, could mitigate the impacts of climate changes, as well as the negative impacts of conventional arable management practices on soil conditions, which can reduce microbial diversity and abundance.Therefore, the bioprospecting for microbial taxa suitable for reproduction and application as biofertilizers should focus on selecting species that are both highly effective and tolerant of unfavourable environmental conditions.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Diagram of the two iron (Fe) acquisition strategies employed by plants: orange ellipses show the chemical form of Fe, blue circles represent hydrogen (H+) ions, white boxes with arrows indicate molecule transport points into/out of the root, and numbers indicate individual steps of the process (based on[29,42,43]).

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Conceptual diagram showing the main causes of micronutrient limitation, strategies for alleviating micronutrient deficiencies using microbial biofertilizers, and research considerations for future research into biofertilizers, based on observations from natural ecosystems.