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  • Plant survival is greatly impaired when oxygen levels are limiting, such as during flooding events. A series of laboratory experiments with Arabidopsis thaliana suggests that the universal stress protein HRU1 coordinates oxygen sensing with ROS signalling under anoxic conditions.

    • Silvia Gonzali
    • Elena Loreti
    • Pierdomenico Perata
    Article
  • Mimicry, deception and sensory exploitation of animals by plants is controversial, especially for seed dispersal. A field experiment in a South African nature reserve suggests that the large brown, round, strongly scented seeds of Ceratocaryum argenteum that emit many volatiles found to be present in herbivore dung, attract dung beetles that roll and bury them.

    • Jeremy J. Midgley
    • Joseph D. M. White
    • Gary N. Bronner
    Brief Communication
  • NLPs are immunogenic patterns present in three kingdoms of life. The authors identify the leucin-rich repeat membrane protein RLP23 as the NLP receptor in Arabidopsis. Expression of RLP23 in potato enhances immunity against pathogenic microbes.

    • Isabell Albert
    • Hannah Böhm
    • Thorsten Nürnberger
    Article
  • Predictions suggest that a high proportion of plant species will be threatened with extinction in the near future. A global assessment of the threat status of cacti suggests that these iconic plants are amongst the most threatened taxonomic groups, with 31% of the 1,478 evaluated species at risk of extinction.

    • Bárbara Goettsch
    • Craig Hilton-Taylor
    • Kevin J. Gaston
    Article
  • The frequency of severe droughts is increasing in many regions around the world as a result of climate change. An analysis of tree growth and mortality data from forests worldwide suggests that large trees fare worse under drought than small trees.

    • Amy C. Bennett
    • Nathan G. McDowell
    • Kristina J. Anderson-Teixeira
    Article
  • The geographic extent of stripe rust, a fungal disease that adversely affects wheat production, has increased in recent decades. Observations and model simulations suggest that over 5 million tonnes of wheat are lost to this pathogen each year, necessitating a sustained annual investment of at least US$32 million into rust resistance research.

    • Jason M. Beddow
    • Philip G. Pardey
    • Tania Yonow
    Article
  • The signalling pathway underlying the self-incompatibility response in Brassicaceae remains elusive. Genetic and physiological experiments now show that Ca2+-influx, probably mediated by glutamate receptor-like channels, leads to self-pollen rejection.

    • Megumi Iwano
    • Kanae Ito
    • Seiji Takayama
    Article
  • Magnesium chelatase catalyses Mg insertion into the centre of protoporphyrin IX during chlorophyll synthesis. The crystal structure of magnesium chelatase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis shows an active site deeply buried within protein lined with evolutionary conserved residues.

    • Xuemin Chen
    • Hua Pu
    • Lin Liu
    Article
  • Competition for light has profound effects on plant performance in virtually all terrestrial ecosystems. An experimental study in a temperate forest understorey suggests that low light levels limit warming-induced changes in the composition of the forest floor plant community.

    • Pieter De Frenne
    • Francisco Rodríguez-Sánchez
    • Kris Verheyen
    Article
  • Terrestrial ecosystem productivity is widely accepted to be nutrient limited. A series of standardized nutrient addition experiments, carried out on grasslands on five continents, suggests aboveground grassland productivity is commonly limited by multiple nutrients, including potassium and micronutrients.

    • Philip A. Fay
    • Suzanne M. Prober
    • Louie H. Yang
    Article