AI Article Synopsis

  • Grasses can accumulate silicon (Si), which helps them cope with environmental stress, particularly in harsh climates like arid regions.
  • In a study using 57 grass samples from Mediterranean areas, researchers found that Si levels were related to various climate factors, showing a negative association with temperature and precipitation variability.
  • Contrary to expectations, grasses from dry environments didn't have higher Si accumulation; instead, lower Si was linked to higher temperatures and less precipitation, highlighting the complexity of Si accumulation based on geographic and climatic influences.

Article Abstract

Grasses are hyper-accumulators of silicon (Si), which is known to alleviate diverse environmental stresses, prompting speculation that Si accumulation evolved in response to unfavourable climatic conditions, including seasonally arid environments. We conducted a common garden experiment using 57 accessions of the model grass , sourced from different Mediterranean locations, to test relationships between Si accumulation and 19 bioclimatic variables. Plants were grown in soil with either low or high (Si supplemented) levels of bioavailable Si. Si accumulation was negatively correlated with temperature variables (annual mean diurnal temperature range, temperature seasonality, annual temperature range) and precipitation seasonality. Si accumulation was positively correlated with precipitation variables (annual precipitation, precipitation of the driest month and quarter, and precipitation of the warmest quarter). These relationships, however, were only observed in low-Si soils and not in Si-supplemented soils. Our hypothesis that accessions of from seasonally arid conditions have higher Si accumulation was not supported. On the contrary, higher temperatures and lower precipitation regimes were associated with lower Si accumulation. These relationships were decoupled in high-Si soils. These exploratory results suggest that geographical origin and prevailing climatic conditions may play a role in predicting patterns of Si accumulation in grasses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10005694PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12050995DOI Listing

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