Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale

Significant ecosystem-scale emissions of methylsalicylate (MeSA), a semivolatile plant hormone thought to act as the mobile signal for systemic acquired resistance (SAR), were observed in an agroforest. Our measurements show that plant internal defence mechanisms can be activated in response to temp...

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Main Authors: T. Karl, A. Guenther, A. Turnipseed, E. G. Patton, K. Jardine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2008-09-01
Series:Biogeosciences
Online Access:http://www.biogeosciences.net/5/1287/2008/bg-5-1287-2008.pdf
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author T. Karl
A. Guenther
A. Turnipseed
E. G. Patton
K. Jardine
author_facet T. Karl
A. Guenther
A. Turnipseed
E. G. Patton
K. Jardine
author_sort T. Karl
collection DOAJ
description Significant ecosystem-scale emissions of methylsalicylate (MeSA), a semivolatile plant hormone thought to act as the mobile signal for systemic acquired resistance (SAR), were observed in an agroforest. Our measurements show that plant internal defence mechanisms can be activated in response to temperature stress and are modulated by water availability on large scales. Highest MeSA fluxes (up to 0.25 mg/m<sup>2</sup>/h) were observed after plants experienced ambient night-time temperatures of ~7.5°C followed by a large daytime temperature increase (e.g. up to 22°C). Under these conditions estimated night-time leaf temperatures were as low as ~4.6°C, likely inducing a response to prevent chilling injury. Our observations imply that plant hormones can be a significant component of ecosystem scale volatile organic compound (VOC) fluxes (e.g. as high as the total monoterpene (MT) flux) and therefore contribute to the missing VOC budget. If generalized to other ecosystems and different types of stresses these findings suggest that semivolatile plant hormones have been overlooked by investigations of the impact of biogenic VOCs on aerosol formation events in forested regions. Our observations show that the presence of MeSA in canopy air serves as an early chemical warning signal indicating ecosystem-scale stresses before visible damage becomes apparent. As a chemical metric, ecosystem emission measurements of MeSA in ambient air could therefore support field studies investigating factors that adversely affect plant growth.
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spelling doaj.art-233d92d2913e46d5b56b29114281e1d92022-12-21T19:50:50ZengCopernicus PublicationsBiogeosciences1726-41701726-41892008-09-015512871294Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scaleT. KarlA. GuentherA. TurnipseedE. G. PattonK. JardineSignificant ecosystem-scale emissions of methylsalicylate (MeSA), a semivolatile plant hormone thought to act as the mobile signal for systemic acquired resistance (SAR), were observed in an agroforest. Our measurements show that plant internal defence mechanisms can be activated in response to temperature stress and are modulated by water availability on large scales. Highest MeSA fluxes (up to 0.25 mg/m<sup>2</sup>/h) were observed after plants experienced ambient night-time temperatures of ~7.5°C followed by a large daytime temperature increase (e.g. up to 22°C). Under these conditions estimated night-time leaf temperatures were as low as ~4.6°C, likely inducing a response to prevent chilling injury. Our observations imply that plant hormones can be a significant component of ecosystem scale volatile organic compound (VOC) fluxes (e.g. as high as the total monoterpene (MT) flux) and therefore contribute to the missing VOC budget. If generalized to other ecosystems and different types of stresses these findings suggest that semivolatile plant hormones have been overlooked by investigations of the impact of biogenic VOCs on aerosol formation events in forested regions. Our observations show that the presence of MeSA in canopy air serves as an early chemical warning signal indicating ecosystem-scale stresses before visible damage becomes apparent. As a chemical metric, ecosystem emission measurements of MeSA in ambient air could therefore support field studies investigating factors that adversely affect plant growth.http://www.biogeosciences.net/5/1287/2008/bg-5-1287-2008.pdf
spellingShingle T. Karl
A. Guenther
A. Turnipseed
E. G. Patton
K. Jardine
Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale
Biogeosciences
title Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale
title_full Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale
title_fullStr Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale
title_full_unstemmed Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale
title_short Chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale
title_sort chemical sensing of plant stress at the ecosystem scale
url http://www.biogeosciences.net/5/1287/2008/bg-5-1287-2008.pdf
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