Maximum Yield USA September 2018 | Page 20

max FACTS Rice Plants with Fewer Stomata Need Less Water; Better Suited for Climate Change According to a new study, rice plants engineered to have fewer stomata — tiny openings used for gas exchange — are more tolerant to drought and resilient to future climate change. Scientists from the University of Sheffield discovered that engineering a high-yielding rice cultivar to have reduced stomatal density helps the crop conserve water and to survive high temperatures and drought. Much of humanity relies on rice as a food source, but rice cultivation is particularly water intensive — using an estimated 2,500 litres of water per kilogram of rice produced. Dr. Robert Caine, research associate from the University of Sheffield’s Department of Molecular Biology, and biotechnology and pincipal investigator of the study, said: “Future predicted decreases in water availability, combined with increased frequency of extreme drought and high temperature events, are likely to present particular challenges for farmers — resulting in substantial crop loss.” The New Phytologist study found low stomatal density rice lines used just 60 per cent of the normal amount of water. —phys.org Weird, New Fruits Soon to Hit Shelves While researchers have previously produced plants with specific traits through traditional breeding techniques, experts say new technologies like the gene-editing tool Crispr-Cas9 could be used to bring about changes more rapidly and efficiently. It could potentially open the door to a new range of fruits and vegetables that look, taste, and feel very different to those we are used to. Gene-editing is already being used by scientists to change the characteristics of food. One such endeavor used Crispr to make mushrooms that don’t brown, while a team in Spain has been using the approach to try to produce wheat that can be eaten by people with coeliac disease. Still others are looking at using gene-editing to give crops resistance to particular environmental problems or pathogens. Another team has been using Crispr to change the architecture of tomato plant branches and the spacing of fruit. —theguardian.com A Future Look at Houseplants as Biosensors A perspective recently published in Science explores the future of houseplants as aesthetically pleasing and biosensors of home health. University of Tennessee (UT) researcher Neal Stewart studies synthetic biology and has co-authored several studies involving engineering plants to react to certain conditions including the presence of too much or little nitrogen. What’s new is the concept of applying synthetic biology to houseplants beyond aesthetic reasons, like larger blooms or variegated foliage. “Houseplants are ubiquitous in our home environments,” says Stewart. “Through the tools of synthetic biology, it’s possible for us to engineer houseplants that can serve as architectural design elements that are both pleasing to our senses and that function as early sensors of environmental agents that could harm our health, like mold, radon gas, or high concentrations of volatile organic compounds.” The idea is to genetically engineer house plants to serve as subtle alarms that something is amiss in our home and office environments. —sciencedaily.com 20 Maximum Yield o 2 N CO 2 CO R n ! 49,7ooo o.o46 135o.o 3.6o o.7o o.o o.o measurements in ppm