Wednesday, February 15, 2023

BESIDES TALKING TO THEM

New research roots out solution to keeping houseplants healthy

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM


Aerial root 

IMAGE: EXAMPLE OF AN AERIAL ROOT ON A COMMON HOUSEPLANT view more 

CREDIT: UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM

Most people own houseplants and eagerly grow them on windowsills and shelves only to be disappointed when they wilt or die - new research has shown that the problem could be that we’re feeding them all wrong and we need to pay attention to the roots outside the soil.

Scientists from the University of Nottingham grew houseplants that have both aerial roots and roots in the soil and found the aerial roots were far better at taking up nitrogen (an important plant food) than their soil counterparts. This was found across three different species and in two humidities. The findings have been published in Plant Cell and Environment.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, houseplant sales in the UK increased by more than 50% from 2019-2022 and trailing varieties in particular like String of Hearts and Devil’s Ivy have become a popular ‘Instagrammable’ trend. 

Aerial roots are a type of adventitious root that grow from the plant’s stem or leaf tissues above the ground. As with roots in soil they provide water and potentially nutrients to the plant in their native forest habitats. However, despite the popularity of houseplants, these expectations of aerial roots have rarely been measured and this is the first study to specifically measure this. 

Dr Amanda Rasmussen from the University of Nottingham’s School of Biosciences led the study and says: “Houseplants are really important for improving air quality and bring mental health benefits but many people struggle to know the best way to look after them. The main focus is usually on feeding them in the soil with regular watering and plant food, but what many people don’t know is that many plant varieties have roots along the external stems that need our attention too. We wanted to test if these roots do take up nutrients and if so, find out exactly how much they can take up to improve the health of the plants.”

In this study the researchers directly compared nutrient uptake preferences of aerial and soil-formed roots of three common houseplant species under high and ambient relative humidities. Growth and physiology parameters were measured weekly for Anthurium andreanum also known as Flamingo Flower, Epipremnum aureum or Devil’s Ivy and Philodendron scandens or Sweetheart Plant grown in custom made growth chambers. 

Both aerial and soil-formed roots were then fed mixtures of nitrate, ammonium and glycine as different potential fertilisers. Aerial roots were consistently better at nitrogen uptake of all three types than soil roots and all three species grew more in high humidity, with aerial roots demonstrating the greatest biomass increase. Higher humidities for indoor niches, together with fertiliser applications to aerial roots will support indoor plant growth.  

Dr Rasmussen adds: “The results of this study are really exciting as they could transform the way we feed certain types of plants and help us to keep them healthy and thriving! A simple spray with water and some plant food to the aerial roots may help optimise the amount of nutrients the plant gets and will ensure we can enjoy them to their fullest for many years.”

This study also highlights the importance of understanding and incorporating aerial root physiology in the design and maintenance of indoor greenspaces.

$1.5 million grant to help researchers address health inequities in chronic pain and depression

Grant and Award Announcement

INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

INDIANAPOLIS—Researchers from Indiana University School of Medicine and Regenstrief Institute are addressing health inequities and empowering minoritized patients in the decision-making process, thanks to a $1.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health’s HEAL Initiative.

The project, Equity Using Interventions for Pain and Depression (EQUIPD), works to address racialized disparities in chronic pain care for Black patients with comorbid chronic pain and depression.

“We want to empower minoritized patients to take more control of their chronic pain so they can effectively partner with their health care providers to manage their care,” said Marianne Matthias, PhD, senior research professor of medicine. “We want to make sure they are aware of the different options available and equip them with the tools they need to take advantage of those options collaboratively with their primary care provider.”

According to Matthias, Black patients often experience greater pain severity, worse pain outcomes and are offered fewer treatment choices than white patients. Depressive symptoms may also interfere with a patient’s ability to engage in and maintain pain self-management activities.

The project, a two-phase study taking place at Eskenazi Hospital, will use one-on-one coaching to foster motivation, help patients clarify their treatment goals and align these goals with nonpharmacological treatment options for pain, such as exercise or chiropractic care. Matthias said these treatment options are underused and are a helpful alternative to using opioids for chronic pain.

“This project is designed to help Black patients have more options for pain treatment, especially evidence-based, nonpharmacological treatments,” Matthias said. “We want to open up more possibilities to patients through coaching sessions focused on shared decision-making about nonpharmacological approaches to chronic pain management. Our goal is to empower patients to advocate for themselves and their preferences, then work together with their doctor to make the best decision for their particular needs, preferences and values.”

The project builds on the researchers’ previous work, funded by the Department of Veterans Affairs, which was focused on helping Black veterans who experience chronic pain become more active participants in their treatment–helping them to advocate for themselves and know what questions to ask of their doctors. Now, the researchers are taking that further, helping patients consider treatments they may not have thought about before.

While this project is focused on the individual level, the team hopes their research will ultimately lay the groundwork for later intervention at the structural level, perhaps in clinics or health care systems. The second phase of their project will expand to a full, randomized trial of patients.

“Our goal is not just to do research,” Matthias said. “We hope to ultimately make a meaningful impact on people’s pain management and quality of life.”

Other IU researchers on the project include Adam Hirsh, PhDKevin Rand, PhD and Michelle Salyers, PhD, all of the IUPUI School of Science, and Nicole Fowler, PhD and Joanne Daggy, PhD of IU School of Medicine.

About IU School of Medicine

IU School of Medicine is the largest medical school in the U.S. and is annually ranked among the top medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. The school offers high-quality medical education, access to leading medical research and rich campus life in nine Indiana cities, including rural and urban locations consistently recognized for livability.

About Regenstrief Institute

Founded in 1969 in Indianapolis, the Regenstrief Institute is a local, national and global leader dedicated to a world where better information empowers people to end disease and realize true health. A key research partner to Indiana University, Regenstrief and its research scientists are responsible for a growing number of major healthcare innovations and studies. Examples range from the development of global health information technology standards that enable the use and interoperability of electronic health records to improving patient-physician communications, to creating models of care that inform practice and improve the lives of patients around the globe. Sam Regenstrief, a nationally successful entrepreneur from Connersville, Indiana, founded the institute with the goal of making healthcare more efficient and accessible for everyone. His vision continues to guide the institute’s research mission.

Trends in screen time use among children during pandemic

JAMA Network Open

Peer-Reviewed Publication

JAMA NETWORK

About The Study: The findings of this study of 228 children ages 4 to 12 suggest that screen time among children increased during the COVID-19 pandemic and remained elevated even after many public health precautions were lifted. The long-term association of increased screen time during the COVID-19 pandemic with children’s health needs to be determined.            

Authors: Monique M. Hedderson, Ph.D., of the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research in Oakland, is the corresponding author. 

To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ 

(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.56157)

Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.

#  #  #

Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.56157?utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_term=021523

About JAMA Network Open: JAMA Network Open is an online-only open access general medical journal from the JAMA Network. On weekdays, the journal publishes peer-reviewed clinical research and commentary in more than 40 medical and health subject areas. Every article is free online from the day of publication.

 

FOREVER CHEMICALS

PFAS can suppress white blood cell’s ability to destroy invaders

Peer-Reviewed Publication

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY

In a new study, researchers found that the PFAS chemical GenX suppresses the neutrophil respiratory burst – the method white blood cells known as neutrophils use to kill invading pathogens. The study is an important first step in understanding how both legacy and emerging PFAS chemicals might affect the body’s innate immune system.

PFAS are a class of per- and polyfluoroalkyl chemicals used to make consumer and industrial products more resistant to water, stains and grease. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, there are more than 12,000 known PFAS, which also include fluoroethers such as GenX.

“It’s pretty well-established that PFAS are toxic to the adaptive immune system, but there hasn’t been as much research done on their effects on the innate immune system,” says Drake Phelps, former Ph.D, student at North Carolina State University and first author of the study.

The human immune system has two branches: adaptive and innate. The adaptive branch contains T cells and B cells that “remember” pathogens the body has encountered, but it is slow to mount a defense, acting days – sometimes weeks – after it detects a pathogen.

The innate immune system serves as the body’s first responders, and contains white blood cells that can be dispatched to the site of an invasion within hours. These white blood cells include neutrophils, which can dump reactive oxygen species – think tiny amounts of bleach or hydrogen peroxide that neutrophils manufacture inside their cells – directly onto pathogens, killing them. That process is called the respiratory burst.

Drake and the research team looked at the effect of nine environmentally relevant legacy and emerging PFAS on neutrophils from zebrafish embryos, neutrophil-like cells (cells that can be chemically treated to behave like neutrophils), and human neutrophil cells cultured from donor blood.

Emerging PFAS are chemicals, like GenX, developed to replace older, legacy PFAS that had proven toxic. All of the PFAS included in this study were detected in both the Cape Fear River and the blood serum of residents whose drinking water came from the Cape Fear River.

The embryos and cells were exposed to 80 micromolar solutions of each chemical:
perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), perfluorooctane sulfonic acid potassium salt (PFOS-K), perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA), perfluorohexanoic acid (PFHxA), perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS), perfluorobutane sulfonic acid (PFBS), ammonium perfluoro(2-methyl-3-oxahexanoate) (GenX), 7H-perfluoro-4-methyl-3,6-dioxa-octane sulfonic acid (Nafion byproduct 2), and perfluoromethoxyacetic acid sodium salt (PFMOAA-Na).

Of the nine PFAS tested, only GenX suppressed the neutrophil respiratory burst in embryonic zebrafish, neutrophil-like cells, and human neutrophils. PFHxA also suppressed the respiratory burst, but only in embryonic zebrafish and neutrophil-like cells.

The researchers caution that while the results of this preliminary study are interesting, they raise more questions than they answer.

“The longest chemical exposure in our study was four days, so obviously we can’t compare that to real human exposure of four decades,” says Jeff Yoder, professor of comparative immunology at NC State and corresponding author of the work. “We looked at a high dose of single PFAS over a short period, whereas people in the Cape Fear River basin were exposed to a mixture of PFAS – a low dose over a long period.

“So while we can say that we see a toxic effect from a high dose in the cell lines, we can’t yet say what effects long-term exposure may ultimately have on the immune system. This paper isn’t the end of the road – it’s the first step. Hopefully our work may help prioritize further study of these two chemicals.”

The study appears in the Journal of Immunotoxicology and was supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), the North Carolina State University Center for Environmental and Health Effects of PFAS, and the North Carolina State University Center for Human Health and the Environment (CHHE). Jamie DeWitt, professor of pharmacology and toxicology at East Carolina University, is co-author.

-peake-

Note to editors: An abstract follows.

“Legacy and Emerging Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances Suppress the Neutrophil Respiratory Burst”

DOI10.1080/1547691X.2023.2176953

Authors: Drake W. Phelps, Anika I. Palekar, Haleigh E. Conley, Giuliano Ferrero, Jacob H. Driggers, Keith E. Linder, Seth W. Kullman, David M. Reif, M. Katie Sheats, Jeffrey A. Yoder, North Carolina State University; Jamie DeWitt, East Carolina University
Published: Feb. 15, 2023 in Journal of Immunotoxicology

Abstract:
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are used in a multitude of processes and products, including non-stick coatings, food wrappers, and fire-fighting foams. These chemicals are environmentally-persistent, ubiquitous, and can be detected in the serum of 98% of Americans. Despite evidence that PFASs alter adaptive immunity, few studies have investigated their effects on innate immunity. The report here presents results of studies that investigated the impact of nine environmentally-relevant PFASs [e.g., perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), perfluorooctane sulfonic acid potassium salt (PFOS-K), perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA), perfluorohexanoic acid (PFHxA), perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS), perfluorobutane sulfonic acid (PFBS), ammonium perfluoro(2-methyl-3-oxahexanoate) (GenX), 7H-perfluoro-4-methyl-3,6-dioxa-octane sulfonic acid (Nafion byproduct 2), and perfluoromethoxyacetic acid sodium salt (PFMOAA-Na)] on one component of the innate immune response, the neutrophil respiratory burst. The respiratory burst is a key innate immune process by which microbicidal reactive oxygen species (ROS) are rapidly induced by neutrophils in response to pathogens; defects in the respiratory burst can increase susceptibility to infection. The study here utilized larval zebrafish, a human neutrophil-like cell line, and primary human neutrophils to ascertain whether PFAS exposure inhibits ROS production in the respiratory burst. It was observed that exposure to PFHxA and GenX suppresses the respiratory burst in zebrafish larvae and a human neutrophil-like cell line. GenX also suppressed the respiratory burst in primary human neutrophils. This report is the first to demonstrate that these PFASs suppress neutrophil function and supports the utility of employing zebrafish larvae and a human cell line as screening tools to identify chemicals that may suppress human immune function.

New results provide close-up view of melting underneath Thwaites Glacier

New data from an international expedition and underwater robot Icefin beneath the remote Thwaites Glacier in Antarctica

Peer-Reviewed Publication

BRITISH ANTARCTIC SURVEY

The rapid retreat of Thwaites Glacier in West Antarctica appears to be driven by different processes under its floating ice shelf than researchers previously understood. Novel observations from where the ice enters the ocean show that while melting beneath much of the ice shelf is weaker than expected, melting in cracks and crevasses is much faster. Despite the suppressed melting the glacier is still retreating, and these findings provide an important step forward in understanding the glacier’s contribution to future sea-level rise.

Two papers in the journal Nature this week (15 February 2023) provide a clearer picture of the changes taking place under the glacier, which is the size of Great Britain or the US state of Florida and is one of the fastest changing ice-ocean systems in Antarctica. Results show that although melting has increased beneath the floating ice shelf, the present rate of melting is slower than many computer models currently estimate.

A layer of fresher water between the bottom of the ice shelf and the underlying ocean, slows the rate of melting along flat parts of the ice shelf.  But the authors were surprised to see the melting had formed stair-case-like topography across the bottom of the ice shelf. In these areas, as well as in cracks in the ice, rapid melting is occurring. 

Thwaites Glacier is one of the fastest changing glaciers in Antarctica: the grounding zone — the point where it meets the seafloor — has retreated 14 km since the late 1990s. Much of the ice sheet is below sea level and susceptible to rapid, irreversible ice loss that could raise global sea-level by over half a metre within centuries.

The new data were collected as part of the MELT project, one of the projects in the UK-US International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration, one of the largest international field campaigns ever undertaken in Antarctica. The MELT team undertook observations of the grounding line (where the ice first meets the ocean) beneath the Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf in order to understand how the ice and ocean interacts in this critical region.

Dr Peter Davis of the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) took ocean measurements through a 600m deep borehole around two kilometres from the grounding line, created by a hot water drill in late 2019. These measurements were compared with melt rate observations taken at five other sites underneath the ice shelf. Over a nine-month period, the ocean near the grounding line became warmer and saltier but the melt rate at the ice base averaged 2-5 m per year: less than previously modelled.

Dr Peter Davis, who’s an oceanographer at BAS and lead author on one of the studies, says:

“Our results are a surprise but the glacier is still in trouble. If an ice shelf and a glacier is in balance, the ice coming off the continent will match the amount of ice being lost through melting and iceberg calving. What we have found is that despite small amounts of melting there is still rapid glacier retreat, so it seems that it doesn’t take a lot to push the glacier out of balance.”

Dr Britney Schmidt, of Cornell University in the US, and a team of scientists and engineers deployed a robot called Icefin through the 600m deep borehole.  The vehicle is designed to access such grounding zones that were previously almost impossible to survey. The observations Icefin made of the seafloor and ice around the grounding zone provide more detail on the picture of how melting varies beneath the ice shelf. They found the staircases, called terraces, as well as crevasses in the ice base are melting rapidly. Melting is especially important in crevasses, as water funnels through them heat and salt can be transferred into the ice, widening the crevasses and rifts.

So, although the vertical melting along the base of the ice shelf was less than expected, melting along sloped ice in these cracks and terraces is much higher and may be a significant factor in ice loss across Thwaites Glacier, especially as major rifts are progressing across the ice shelf and may become the primary trigger for ice shelf collapse.

Dr Britney Schmidt, who’s an Associate Professor at Cornell University and lead author of the second study, says:

“These new ways of observing the glacier allow us to understand that it’s not just how much melting is happening, but how and where it is happening that matters in these very warm parts of Antarctica. We see crevasses, and probably terraces, across warming glaciers like Thwaites.  Warm water is getting into the cracks, helping wear down the glacier at its weakest points.”

Issued by the Press Office at British Antarctic Survey for the International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC)

Emily Newton, communications officer, mobile +44 (0) 7517 466407; emiton@bas.ac.uk

Athena Dinar, UK ITGC communications lead, mobile: +44 (0)7909 008516; email: amdi@bas.ac.uk

Notes to Editors

There are a lot of great images and footage to accompany these papers and to illustrate these results. This includes the MELT camp on Thwaites Glacier from the 2019/20 field season, the hot water drill rig, the Icefin robot being deployed, moving images down the borehole through the ice shelf and footage of under the ice near the grounding line showing the ‘staircase’ like topography of the ice. It’s all saved here: https://files.bas.ac.uk/photo/Thwaites-Glacier/Icefin-robot/ and caption information is included in this folder. Images should include the name of the photographer and should be credited as ‘Pete Davis, ITGC’ or similar. There is an animation showing the grounding line that was produced by ITGC but can be used to illustrate how the glacier is melting from below.

Heterogeneous melting near the Thwaites Glacier grounding line by B. E. Schmidt1,2 ✉, P. Washam1,2, P. E. D. Davis3 , K. W. Nicholls3 , D. M. Holland4,5, J. D. Lawrence6 , K. L. Riverman7 , J. A. Smith3 , A. Spears6 , D. J. G. Dichek1,2, A. D. Mullen1,2, E. Clyne8,9, B. Yeager5 , P. Anker3 , M. R. Meister1,2, B. C. Hurwitz6 , E. S. Quartini1,2, F. E. Bryson1,2,6, A. Basinski-Ferris4 , C. Thomas3 , J. Wake3 , D. G. Vaughan3 , S. Anandakrishnan8 , E. Rignot10, J. Paden11 & K. Makinson3 is published in the journal Nature.

Suppressed basal melting in the eastern Thwaites Glacier grounding zone by Peter E. D. Davis1 ✉, Keith W. Nicholls1, David M. Holland2,3, Britney E. Schmidt4, Peter Washam4, Kiya L. Riverman5,6, Robert J. Arthern1, Irena Vaňková1, Clare Eayrs3, James A. Smith1, Paul G. D. Anker1, Andrew D. Mullen4, Daniel Dichek4, Justin D. Lawrence7, Matthew M. Meister4, Elisabeth Clyne8,9, Aurora Basinski-Ferris2, Eric Rignot10,11, Bastien Y. Queste12, Lars Boehme13, Karen J. Heywood14, Sridhar Anandakrishnan8 & Keith Makinson1 is published in the journal Nature.

This mission is part of the International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC), a five-year, $50 million joint U.S. and U.K. mission to learn more about Thwaites Glacier, its past, and what the future may hold. Find out more here: www.thwaitesglacier.org

Thwaites Glacier, covering 192,000 square kilometres (74,000 square miles)—an area the size of Florida or Great Britain—is particularly susceptible to climate and ocean changes. Computer models show that over the next several decades, the glacier may lose ice rapidly, as ice retreats. Already, ice draining from Thwaites into the Amundsen Sea accounts for about four percent of global sea-level rise. A run-away collapse of the glacier would contribute around an additional 65cm (25 inches) to sea-level rise over the coming centuries.

The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) is the U.K.'s main agency for funding and managing research, training and knowledge exchange in the environmental sciences. Our work covers the full range of atmospheric, Earth, biological, terrestrial and aquatic science, from the deep oceans to the upper atmosphere and from the poles to the equator. We coordinate some of the world's most exciting research projects, tackling major issues such as climate change, environmental influences on human health, the genetic make-up of life on Earth, and much more. NERC is part of U.K. Research and Innovation, a non-departmental public body funded by a grant-in-aid from the U.K. government. Find out more at nerc.ukri.org.

The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) was established by the U.S. Congress in 1950 "to promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity and welfare; to secure the national defense; and for other purposes." NSF is vital because its supports basic research to create knowledge that transforms the future. With an annual budget of $8.5 billion (fiscal year 2021), NSF funds discovery, learning, innovation and research infrastructure to boost U.S. leadership in all aspects of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) research and education. In contrast, other federal agencies support research focused on specific missions, such as health, energy or defense.

Through its Office of Polar Programs (OPP), the NSF manages the United States Antarctic Program (USAP). Under Presidential Mandate, the OPP coordinates all U.S. research on the southernmost continent, funds Antarctic research carried out by university researchers nationwide, operates three year-round Antarctic research stations and two research vessels and provides or coordinates all of the logistical support required to make the science possible.

Insect bite marks show first fossil evidence for plants’ leaves folding up at night

Peer-Reviewed Publication

CELL PRESS

Gigantopterid leaves hosting insect feeding damage 

IMAGE: GIGANTOPTERID LEAVES HOSTING INSECT FEEDING DAMAGE view more 

CREDIT: CURRENT BIOLOGY/FENG ET AL.

Plants can move in ways that might surprise you. Some of them even show “sleep movements,” folding or raising their leaves each night before opening them again the next day. Now, researchers reporting in the journal Current Biology on February 15 offer the first convincing evidence for these nightly movements, also known as foliar nyctinasty, in fossil plants that lived more than 250 million years ago.

“Our findings reveal extinct plants evolved foliar nyctinastic movements at such an early stage of plant evolution, which is surprising to me,” said Zhuo Feng of Yunnan University in Kunming, China.

Our discovery is based on an unorthodox approach,” added Stephen McLoughlin of the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm. “Since it is impossible to tell whether a folded leaf found in the fossil record was closed because it experienced sleeping behavior or because it shriveled and bent after death, we looked for insect damage patterns that are unique to plants with nyctinastic behavior. We found one group of fossil plants that reveals a very ancient origin for this behavioral strategy.”

Feng has had a long interest in fossil plant-insect interactions and their coevolution, finding evidence of insect damage of varying types in the fossil record. In 2013, he discovered an interesting pattern of insect damage in living plants: symmetrical holes punctured through the leaves, which he later realized looked the way they did because insects fed on the leaves while they were folded. As this type of damage is common in nyctinastic plants, he wondered whether he could find it in fossil plants as evidence for sleeping movements.

The study now shows that, indeed, they could. The researchers looked to gigantopterids, an extinct group of seed-producing plants characteristic of the Permian Cathaysian floras from about 300–250 million years ago. They thought these plants were the best place to look because the plants are known to experience frequent attacks from plant-eating (herbivorous) insects. Their broad leaves with robust midvein also make insect damage easy to detect. The first fossil gigantopterid leaf showing the symmetrical pattern they sought turned up in 2016.

“I was surprised by the distinctive pattern of the insect damage and thought it might represent foliar nyctinasty in the fossil plant,” Feng said. “But to be sure, I searched for more fossil evidence to reinforce my assumption. The second fossil specimen—a different species of the same plant group—revealed the same insect-feeding damage as that preserved in the leaf collected two years earlier. I then began to think about the scientific significance of the specimens.”

He went on to examine hundreds of samples and photos in the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden to find even more convincing evidence for nyctinasty. The findings add to understanding of the ecology and evolution of this enigmatic group of plants, according to the researchers.

“In recent years, some [gigantopterids] have been found to possess hooks on their leaves and have specialized water-conducting cells that indicate that at least some were climbers within early rainforest-like ecosystems,” McLoughlin said. “To this we can now add that some of these plants folded their leaves on a daily basis.”

“It is now clear that sleeping behavior has evolved independently in various plant groups and at different times in the course of Earth’s history, so it must have some ecological benefits to the parent plant,” McLoughlin continued.

The findings show that it’s possible to infer not just structures but also behavioral characteristics of fossilized plants and animals. The researchers say that biological features of ancient organisms could be deciphered in the future from fossil specimens through further detailed observations of animal interactions with both fossil and modern plants.

Evidence of fossil insect damage on leaves can provide a great deal more information about plant ‘behavior’ and ecology than just herbivory,” McLoughlin said. “The fossil record of plant-animal interactions is a rich and largely untouched bank of ecological data.”

We now know that “the evolutionary history of the ‘sleeping movements’ of leaves can be traced back to the late Paleozoic gigantopterid plants more than 250 million years ago,” Feng said. In future studies, he hopes to explore how many other plant lineages may have had similar behavior.

###

This work was supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences; the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research; the Key Research Program of the Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences; and the Swedish Research Council.

Current Biology, Feng et al. “Specialized herbivory in fossil leaves reveals convergent origins of nyctinasty” https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(22)01980-7

Current Biology (@CurrentBiology), published by Cell Press, is a bimonthly journal that features papers across all areas of biology. Current Biology strives to foster communication across fields of biology, both by publishing important findings of general interest and through highly accessible front matter for non-specialists. Visit http://www.cell.com/current-biology. To receive Cell Press media alerts, contact press@cell.com.

Feng's son helping with collecting a specimen of a symmetrical insect-feeding damage on a leaf of Bauhinia

CREDIT

Zhuo Feng