What is it about?
Information available in the environment allows us to forecast what to expect in the next hour, and also days, weeks or months ahead. Forecasts are subject to uncertainty, but still very useful. Not only humans use information to forecast events or conditions, animals do it, and also plants! The methods and concepts of Sensory Ecology have been rarely applied to plants, but are very useful to understand the role played by different sensory systems in the sucess of plants as the organisms that constitute more than 80% of the total biomass on Earth.
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Why is it important?
Describing the molecular mechanisms involved in sensing the environment without considering the role they play in enhancing the success of plants in the environments where they have evolved is only half of the story, and is not very useful in itself. There are two reasons why need a holistic or integrated approach. 1. Plant responses to changes in the environment have two drivers: resources and information. Plants have evolved to use correlations as sources of information: using sensing of one variable to forecast the future state of a different one. If a change in the environment does not alter the historical correlations, plants are likely to tolerate the new conditions unless changes are extreme. In contrast smaller changes in environmental conditions that disturb historical correlations are likely be highly detrimental by triggering "wrong" responses. 2. For crop and tree breeders knowing the procedures needed to manipulate the sensory responses of plants is not enough, as it does not enable the prediction of the consequences of the manipulations outside the laboratory. Unless we understand the role played by the sensed conditions as sources of information, we remain blindfolded.
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This page is a summary of: Explaining pre-emptive acclimation by linking information to plant phenotype, Journal of Experimental Botany, December 2021, Oxford University Press (OUP),
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erab537.
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