“…Metallophores are organic ligands produced by bacteria, fungi, and plants that scavenge metals from the environment (terrestrial and marine) creating a soluble complex. , They play a pivotal role in metal homeostasis, making the metal available to the cell, or contributing to the mitigation of toxic metal contamination from the environment. − The former has great repercussions, e.g., in agriculture, making the metals more available to the plant promoting its growth, whereas the latter has great impact in environmental bioremediation. , In conditions of metal scarcity, the production of metallophores by some microorganisms could participate in shaping microbial communities by promoting both cooperative and competitive interactions. , Among metallophores, the best-known and studied are those that complex iron, also known as siderophores. , Siderophores produced by bacteria and fungi that thrive at neutral pH (ideal conditions for binding) are well characterized, with hundreds of them identified, mostly using laboratory incubation cultures. , However, in the case of soils and environments rich in organic matter, iron availability is constricted, becoming growth limiting. The limited recovery of siderophores from the environment as well as the alkalinity and complexity of the matrix makes the identification of siderophores (and other metallophores by extension) in these highly challenging environments …”