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Scientists Discover Key Nutrients That Help Plants Beat the Heat

Global temperatures are on the rise, with experts projecting an increase of 2.7°F by 2050. Because plants cannot regulate their own temperatures, they are especially sensitive to these temperature changes.

At higher temperatures, plants instruct their  to grow faster, creating long roots that stretch through the soil to absorb more water and nutrients. While this response may help the plants in the short term, new research suggests it's both unsustainable for the plants and potentially harmful for humans in the long term.

Researchers at the Salk Institute have discovered that when certain plants respond to high temperatures with rapid , they are reducing their levels of two important nutrients— and phosphorus—which makes them less nutritious when consumed.

At the same time, if the soil contains low amounts of these nutrients, plants return to slower root growth and don't respond adequately to the higher temperatures.

The new molecular details of this interaction between root growth and  in the face of high temperatures will inform the engineering of Salk Ideal Plants—a collection of carbon-capturing, climate change-resilient wheat, rice, corn, and other crops created by Salk's Harnessing Plants Initiative.

Plant growth and development change based on environmental temperatures in a process known as thermomorphogenesis. To gain a deeper understanding of this process, Salk researchers looked at Arabidopsis thaliana, a small flowering plant in the mustard family.

In early experiments, they noticed the above-ground part of the plant, called the shoot, grew longer when exposed to . This led the Salk team to wonder how these temperatures affected the plant's roots, and whether crop plants, like rice or soybean, might respond similarly.

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