Plants in forest emit
aspirin chemical to deal with stress; Discovery may help agriculture
By T. Karl
Source: The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
CheckBiotech
The finding, by
scientists at the
"Unlike humans, who are advised to take aspirin as a
fever suppressant, plants have the ability to produce their own mix of
aspirin-like chemicals, triggering the formation of proteins that boost their
biochemical defenses and reduce injury," says NCAR scientist Thomas Karl,
who led the study. "Our measurements show that significant amounts of the
chemical can be detected in the atmosphere as plants respond to drought,
unseasonable temperatures, or other stresses."
For years, scientists have known that plants in a laboratory
may produce methyl salicylate, which is a chemical
form of acetylsalicylic acid, or aspirin. But researchers had never before
detected methyl salicylate in an ecosystem or
verified that plants emit the chemical in significant quantities into the
atmosphere.
The team of scientists reported its findings last week in Biogeosciences. The research was funded by the National
Science Foundation, NCAR's sponsor.
An unexpected finding
Researchers had not previously thought to look for methyl salicylate in a forest, and the NCAR team found the
chemical by accident. They set up specialized instruments last year in a walnut
grove near
When the NCAR scientists reviewed their measurements, they
found to their surprise that the emissions of VOCs
included methyl salicylate. The levels of methyl salicylate emissions increased dramatically when the
plants, which were already stressed by a local drought, experienced
unseasonably cool nighttime temperatures followed by large daytime temperature
increases. Instruments mounted on towers about 100 feet above the ground
measured up to 0.025 milligrams of methyl salicylate
rising from each square foot of forest per hour.
Karl and his colleagues speculate that the methyl salicylate has two functions. One of these is to stimulate
plants to begin a process known as systemic acquired resistance, which is
analogous to an immune response in an animal. This helps a plant to both resist
and recover from disease.
The methyl salicylate also may be
a mechanism whereby a stressed plant communicates to neighboring plants,
warning them of the threat. Researchers in laboratories have demonstrated that
a plant may build up its defenses if it is linked in some way to another plant
that is emitting the chemical. Now that the NCAR team has demonstrated that
methyl salicylate can build up in the atmosphere
above a stressed forest, scientists are speculating that plants may use the
chemical to activate an ecosystem-wide immune response.
"These findings show tangible proof that plant-to-plant
communication occurs on the ecosystem level," says NCAR scientist Alex
Guenther, a co-author of the study. "It appears that plants have the
ability to communicate through the atmosphere."
Implications for farmers
The discovery raises the possibility that farmers, forest
managers, and others may eventually be able to start monitoring plants for
early signs of a disease, an insect infestation, or other types of stress. At
present, they often do not know if an ecosystem is unhealthy until there are
visible indicators, such as dead leaves.
"A chemical signal is a very sensitive way to detect
plant stress, and it can be an order of magnitude more effective than using
visual inspections," Karl says. "If you have a sensitive warning
signal that you can measure in the air, you can take action much sooner, such
as applying pesticides. The earlier you detect that something's going on, the
more you can benefit in terms of using fewer pesticides and managing crops
better."
The discovery also can help scientists resolve a central
mystery about VOCs. For years, atmospheric chemists
have speculated that there are more VOCs in the
atmosphere than they have been able to find. Now it appears that some fraction
of the missing VOCs may be methyl salicylate
and other plant hormones. This finding can help scientists
better track the impact of VOCs on the behavior of
clouds and the development of ground-level ozone, an important pollutant.
The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research manages
the
Source: The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
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