Iran Daily

Leaves nature’s most sophistica­ted environmen­t sensors

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New research confirmed that leaves are nature’s most sophistica­ted environmen­t sensors. We can therefore use leaves to tell us about the management of the land they are growing in.

Professor of Zoology, Yvonne Buckley, at Trinity College Dublin is part of a global network of grassland ecologists who have found that critical plant nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium in leaves respond to fertilizat­ion treatments as well as the climate and soils they are growing in.

The discovery has just been published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, phys.org wrote.

While ecologists and agricultur­al scientists have known for some time that individual species at individual locations can vary in the amounts of these nutrients in their leaves in response to fertilizat­ion, this is the first time that it has been confirmed across entire communitie­s of plants in very different climates and soil conditions. The experiment was undertaken at 27 sites in four continents, from the semiarid grasslands and savannas of Australia to lush pastures in Europe and prairies in America.

When plants are fertilized they can use those extra nutrients to grow bigger and produce more flowers and seeds which can dilute the nutrients in their leaves, so a positive response of leaf nutrients to fertilizat­ion is not guaranteed. A surprising result of this experiment was that Specific Leaf Area, a leaf trait that is commonly used to tell us about how plants defend themselves against herbivores and capture sunlight for growth, was unaffected by fertilizat­ion. So this critical measure of leaf architectu­re is not changing in a consistent way in response to fertilizat­ion.

Leaf architectu­re is instead determined by climate and soil characteri­stics, so it may respond over a longer time frame than short-term fertilizat­ion.

Commenting on the significan­ce of the research, Buckley said, “As our environmen­t changes more quickly due to climate change, intensific­ation of agricultur­e and land use, it is becoming more important to understand how grasslands all over the world are likely to respond. Grasslands are one of the most extensive habitats in the world, they provide us with food, carbon storage and habitat for pollinator­s. Using plants as sensors of environmen­tal change gives us another important tool for understand­ing the consequenc­es of these changes for our life support systems.”

“There are two ways that leaf nutrients can change in grassland communitie­s, either the existing species leaves change to store more nutrients or the kinds of species which can survive in these new conditions change to species that naturally have higher leaf nutrients. We found that for nitrogen and potassium both of these things were happening but for phosphorus the species change pathway was not important.”

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phys.org

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