Mycom Selection Software Now

Mycom Selection Software Now

*Values: mean (SD). p < 0.05 vs. T2 (paired t-test).

Author: [Author Name(s)] Affiliation: [Institution/Department] Date: April 17, 2026 Abstract The selection of appropriate mycorrhizal inoculants for agricultural crops remains a trial-and-error process, often leading to suboptimal plant-fungal symbiosis. This paper presents MyCoM (Mycorrhizal Community Management) , a novel selection software that integrates phylogenetic trait matching, soil physicochemical data, and crop phenology to recommend optimal arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) consortia. The software employs a weighted decision matrix based on three core modules: a host preference database, an environmental tolerance engine, and a functional trait optimizer. Validation against 12 controlled field trials shows that MyCoM-selected consortia increase root colonization rates by an average of 34% and phosphorus uptake efficiency by 27% compared to commercial generalist inoculants. This paper details the software’s architecture, algorithmic logic, user interface, and performance benchmarks. mycom selection software

The authors declare no competing financial interests. The software is distributed under an MIT license. *Values: mean (SD)

| Crop | Soil pH | T2 Colonization (%) | T3 Colonization (%) | T4 Colonization (%) | T3 P-uptake vs. T2 | |------|---------|---------------------|---------------------|---------------------|--------------------| | Maize | 6.2 | 42.3 (4.1) | 61.7 (3.8)* | 58.2 (5.2) | +31% | | Soybean| 5.8 | 38.7 (3.5) | 52.4 (4.0)* | 54.1 (3.9) | +26% | | Wheat | 7.4 | 31.2 (2.9) | 48.9 (3.3)* | 47.5 (4.1) | +24% | | Tomato | 6.5 | 45.0 (3.2) | 67.2 (4.4)* | 63.5 (4.8) | +29% | Validation against 12 controlled field trials shows that

[ C_hf = \fracN_studies(host, fungus) \cdot w_study + MD_host \cdot w_MDw_study + w_MD ]

[ Score(S) = \frac1k \sum_f \in S (C_hf \cdot E_score) \cdot (1 + \lambda \cdot FD(S)) ]

Mycorrhiza, selection software, agroinformatics, symbiosis optimization, AMF inoculants 1. Introduction Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) form mutualistic associations with over 80% of terrestrial plants, enhancing water and nutrient acquisition in exchange for photosynthetic carbon (Smith & Read, 2008). Despite this potential, commercial mycorrhizal inoculants often fail in the field due to a mismatch between the fungal species selected and the specific crop–soil–climate context (Hart et al., 2018).