Thursday, October 30, 2025

 

New study explores ‘legacy effects’ of soil microbes on plants across Kansas





University of Kansas

Corn root and 'legacy effects' of soil microbes 

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The research team from the University of Kansas performed genetic analysis on both microbes and plants to better understand on the molecular level how legacy effects might function. Pictured is cross section of a corn root from the study.

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Credit: Maggie Wagner





LAWRENCE — A new study appearing in Nature Microbiology analyzes soils sampled across the state of Kansas to determine the importance of “legacy effects” — or how soils from a specific location are influenced by microbes that have evolved in response to the specific climate at that site for many years.

“The bacteria and fungi and other organisms living in the soil can actually end up having important effects on things that matter, like carbon sequestration, nutrient movement and what we’re particularly interested in — the legacy effects on plants,” said co-author Maggie Wagner, associate professor of ecology & evolutionary biology at the University of Kansas.

“We got interested in this because other researchers, for years, have been describing this type of ecological memory of soil microbes having some way to remember from their ancestors' past,” she said. “We thought this was really fascinating. It has a lot of important implications for how we can grow plants, including things like corn and wheat. Precipitation itself has a big influence on how plants grow, but also the memory of the microbes living in those soils could also play a role.”

According to Wagner, while legacy effects previously have been reported, they aren’t well characterized. A better understanding could eventually benefit farmers and agricultural biotech firms, which could build on the research.

“We don't really understand how legacy effects work,” she said. “Like, which microbes are involved at the genetic level, and how does that work? Which bacterial genes are being influenced? We also don't understand how that legacy of climate moves through the soil to the microbes, and then eventually to the plant.”

By sampling soils from six sites across Kansas — from its lower, rainier eastern half to the state’s western High Plains, higher in altitude and drier because of the rain shadow of the Rocky Mountains — the researchers aimed to determine differences in legacy effects.

“This was a collaboration with a team at the University of Nottingham in England,” Wagner said. “We divided up the work, but the bulk of the experiment — actually, the entire experiment — was conducted here at KU, and we also focused on soils from Kansas for this work.”

Back at KU, Wagner and her colleagues began testing the soils to better understand legacy effects of the samples’ microbes.

“We used a kind of old-school technique, treating the microbes as a black box,” she said. “We grew the plant in different microbial communities with different drought memories and then measured plants’ performance to understand what was beneficial and what was not.”

The researchers challenged the microbial communities for five months, either with plenty of water or very little water.

“Even after many thousands of bacterial generations, the memory of drought was still detectable,” Wagner said. “One of the most interesting aspects we saw is that the microbial legacy effect was much stronger with plants that were native to those exact locales than plants that were from elsewhere and planted for agricultural reasons but weren't native.”

While more plant species will need to be tested to confirm this hypothesis — the researchers tested one crop (corn) and one native plant (gamagrass) — the researchers said the findings could offer important context for farmers who want to use beneficial microbes to improve yields.

“We think it has something to do with the co-evolutionary history of those plants, meaning that over very long periods, gamagrass has been living with these exact microbial communities, but corn has not,” she said. “Corn was domesticated in Central America and has only been in this area for a few thousand years.”

Additionally, the research team performed genetic analysis on both microbes and plants to better understand on the molecular level how legacy effects might function.

“The gene that excited us most was called nicotianamine synthase,” Wagner said. “It produces a molecule mainly useful for plants to acquire iron from the soil but has also been recorded to influence drought tolerance in some species. In our analysis, the plant expressed this gene under drought conditions, but only when grown with microbes with a memory of dry conditions. The plant’s response to drought depended on the memory of the microbes, which we found fascinating.”

The KU researcher said gamagrass is being looked at as a possible source of genes to improve corn performance under challenging conditions.

“The gene I mentioned earlier could be of interest,” she said. “For biotech firms focused on microbial additions to crops, this gives hints about where to look for microbes with beneficial properties. Microbial commercialization in agriculture is a multibillion dollar industry and still growing.”

Wagner’s KU collaborators were lead author Nichole Ginnan, now of the University of California-Riverside, and Natalie Ford, now of Pennsylvania State University; Valéria Custódio, David Gopaulchan, Dylan Jones, Darren Wells and Gabriel Castrillo of the University of Nottingham; Isai Salas-González of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; and Ângela Moreno of the Ministério da Agricultura e Ambiente in Cabo Verde.

“One of the things that makes this work valuable is how interdisciplinary it was,” Wagner said. “We brought together genetic analysis, plant physiology and microbiology, allowing us to ask and answer questions that couldn’t have been addressed before.”

This research was funded by the National Science Foundation’s Division of Integrative Organismal Systems.

 

World’s leading medical journal details the climate emergency



The Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change




University of Sydney






New global findings in the 2025 Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change reveal that the continued overreliance on fossil fuels and failure to adapt to climate change continues to be paid in people’s lives, health, and livelihoods, with 13 of 20 indictors tracking health threats now reaching unprecedented levels.

 

The University of Sydney’s Heat and Health Research Centre contributed to the global report of the Countdown, which is published annually by The Lancet, the world’s leading medical research journal and is regularly among its most highly cited articles.

 

The annual indicator report, now in its ninth year, informs government policy globally with respect to climate change. It covers 50+ indicators tracking the impacts of, and efforts to adapt to, the ongoing health effects of climate change globally across five working groups, representing the work of 128 leading experts from 71 academic institutions and UN agencies globally. 

 

Findings of 2025 report

 

This year’s report indicates: 

 

  • 2.5 million deaths every year being attributable to the air pollution that comes from continued burning of fossil fuels. 

 

  • Heat-related mortality per 100,000 increased by 23 percent since the 1990s, with total heat-related deaths reaching an average of 546,000 annually between 2012 and 2021

 

  • The year 2024 was the hottest on record. Worldwide, the average person was exposed to a record extra 16 health-threatening hot days owing directly to climate change, with the most vulnerable (those aged under 1 year and over 65 years) experiencing, on average, an all-time high of 20 heatwave days - a 389 percent and 304 percent increase, respectively, from the 1986–2005 yearly average.

 

  • Hotter and dryer conditions have fuelled conditions for wildfires, with fine particle pollution (PM 2.5) from wildfire smoke resulting in a record 154,000 deaths in 2024 (up 36 percent from the 2003–2012 yearly average).

 

  • Heat exposure resulted in a record 639 billion potential hours of lost labour productivity in 2024, with income losses equivalent to US$1.09 trillion (almost 1 percent of global GDP). At the same time, the costs of heat-related deaths in those over age 65 reached an all-time high of US$261 billion.

 

  • Droughts and heatwaves increased the number of people experiencing moderate or severe food insecurity by 123 million in 2023, compared to the annual average between 1981 and 2010.

 

  • Across 65 countries with low access to clean energy, air pollution from the household use of dirty fuels resulted in 2.3 million avoidable deaths in 2022; including some of the 2.52 million deaths still attributable to ambient air pollution from the burning of fossil fuels globally. 

 

  • High-carbon, unhealthy diets contributed to 11.8 million diet-related deaths in 2022, which could largely be avoided by transitioning to healthier, climate-friendly food systems.

 

  • Over 128 million hectares of forest were destroyed in 2023 (up 24 percent since 2022), diminishing the world’s natural capacity to mitigate climate change.

 

  • 15 out of 87 countries responsible for 93 percent of global CO2 emissions spent more on net fossil fuel subsidies than their national health budgets in 2023.

 

  • Governments collectively spent $US956 billion on net fossil fuel subsidies in 2023. Meanwhile oil and gas giants keep expanding their production plans – to a scale three times greater, on projected production, by 2040 than a liveable planet can support. 

 

  • Private banks are supporting fossil fuel expansion, with the top 40 lenders to the fossil fuel sector collectively investing a five-year high of $US611 billion in 2024 (up 29 percent from 2023). This exceeded their green sector lending by 15 percent. 

 

Positive action

 

The report also details actions local governments, individuals, civil society, and the health sector are undertaking to shape a healthier future including: 

 

  • A growing number of cities (834 of 858 reporting in 2024) have completed or intend to complete climate change risk assessments. 

 

  • The health sector itself has shown climate leadership, with health-related greenhouse gas emissions falling 16 percent globally between 2021 and 2022.

 

  • Almost two-thirds of medical students around the world received climate and health education in 2024, building capacity for further progress.

 

  • An increased shift away from coal, particularly in wealthy countries, prevented an estimated 160,000 premature deaths yearly between 2010 and 2022, due to fine particulate air pollution from burning fossil fuels. 

 

  • The share of electricity generated by modern renewables reached a record-high 12 percent in 2022, with the clean energy transition generating healthier, more sustainable jobs. 

 

Professor Anthony Costello, Co-Chair of the Lancet Countdown warned, “As a rising number of world leaders threaten to reverse the little progress to date, urgent efforts are needed at every level and in every sector to both deliver and demand accelerated action that will yield immediate health benefits. As some governments uphold an unsustainable, unhealthy and ultimately unliveable status quo, people around the world are paying the ultimate price. We have to build on the momentum we have seen from local action: Delivering health-protective, equitable, and just transition requires all hands on deck.”

 

University of Sydney contribution 

 

Ollie Jay, Professor of Heat and Health and Director of the Heat and Health Research Centre (HHRC), is a Chair of the one of the five working groups, Working Group 1, contributing to the global report making the University of Sydney the host institution of the group. 

 

This group addresses all aspects of health impacts and vulnerabilities and has academic oversight of the 20 indicators associated with it, the highest number of the report, including indicators Professor Jay has led on, supported by University of Sydney HHRC researchers Dr Federico Tartarini and Associate Professor Troy Cross. 

 

  • heatwave exposure of vulnerable populations

 

  • heat and physical activity

 

Dr James Smallcombe, also from the HHRC is the Working Group 1 global fellow and an author on the report. 

 

Professor Jay said, “The findings in this year’s report are sobering, revealing that millions of lives have already been lost unnecessarily due to over-reliance on fossil fuels, rising greenhouse gas emissions, and inadequate adaptation to climate change. The imperative now is to limit future harm by placing human health at the centre of policy decisions. The HHRC at the University of Sydney is proud to be leading several contributions featured in this year’s report—driven by our team of early and mid-career researchers who represent the next generation of leaders the world urgently needs.”

 

The Lancet Countdown is funded by Wellcome Trust and the online launch event of the global report yesterday was addressed by speakers including:

  • Chair of the Lancet Countdown, Helen Clark
  • Director of the WHO Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
  • Chair of Wellcome Hon. Julia Gillard 

The 9th Lancet Countdown annual indicator report is led by University College London and is produced in strategic partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO). 

 

Mapping the missing green: An AI framework boosts urban greening in Tokyo



Researchers develop an AI-based spatial framework to identify where vertical greenery is most needed in Tokyo’s high-density neighborhoods




Chiba University

Mapping vertical greening across Tokyo’s 23 wards 

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Researchers from Chiba University analyzed over 80,000 street-view images to map vertical greenery in Tokyo, revealing that green façades are much more prevalent than living walls. The study also identified areas where additional greenery could improve urban comfort, mitigate heat, and enhance overall city life.

 

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Credit: Professor Katsunori Furuya from Chiba University, Japan https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2210670725006729





In rapidly growing cities like Tokyo, incorporating greenery is a challenging task. With limited space for trees or parks, vertical greening—the placement of vegetation on building façades—has become a creative solution to reintroduce nature into crowded urban settings. However, until now, there has been no clear method to assess where this type of greenery is most needed or most effective.

 

To address this challenge, researchers from Chiba University in Japan have created a data-driven spatial framework that identifies the best locations for vertical greening throughout Tokyo's 23 wards. The study, made available online on September 6, 2025, and published in Volume 132 of the journal Sustainable Cities and Society on September 15, 2025, provides the first citywide map of vertical greenery in one of the world’s densest metropolitan areas.

 

The research team—led by Professor Katsunori Furuya, along with Ms. Ruochen Ma, Ms. Yunchen Xu, Ms. Yan Tang, Mr. Sihan Zhang, and Ms. Yuhui Liao from the Graduate School of Horticulture, Chiba University, Japan—used artificial intelligence to analyze more than 80,000 Google Street View images. Using a deep-learning model (YOLOv8), they detected façades featuring vegetation, such as green walls and balcony plants, to create a detailed spatial inventory of Tokyo’s vertical greening systems.

 

“With this study, we aimed to provide a clearer picture of how vertical greenery is distributed in dense urban areas like Tokyo and how it aligns—or fails to align—with environmental needs,” explains Prof. Furuya. “By combining AI-based image analysis with spatial data, we can now pinpoint where greening efforts could make the greatest difference.”

 

The researchers introduced a new metric called the vertical greening demand index (VGDI), which evaluates where additional greening could reduce urban heat most effectively and improve environmental quality. The VGDI integrates multiple factors, such as land use, building density, surface temperature, and pedestrian exposure to heat.

 

Their findings revealed an uneven distribution of vertical greenery across the city. While commercial and residential zones in central Tokyo had some vegetated façades, several heat-prone and lower-income neighborhoods had far less greenery, highlighting the need for a more equitable distribution. The team also identified “priority greening zones,” where adding vertical vegetation could reduce surface temperatures and improve thermal comfort for residents.

 

“Our analysis shows that vertical greening is not just an architectural feature—it’s an environmental necessity,” says Prof. Furuya. “With data-driven planning, city authorities can target specific areas to enhance cooling, biodiversity, and overall urban resilience.”

 

The framework’s implications extend beyond Tokyo. As compact cities around the world face rising temperatures and limited ground space, similar data-driven tools can guide the selection of sites for vertical greening to achieve maximum benefit. Policymakers can use indices like the VGDI to inform building regulations, urban renewal projects, and greening incentive programs.

 

In the long run, such approaches could reshape how cities address the growing challenges of climate change. “Expanding greenery within existing built environments is one of the most urgent urban challenges today,” adds Prof. Furuya. “Over the next decade, combining AI and spatial analysis will help governments and designers plan greener, cooler, and more livable cities.

 

The study also highlights the importance of accessibility and fairness in urban environmental planning. By visualizing where greenery is lacking, the framework allows for more transparent and equitable decision-making. As cities worldwide strive toward sustainability goals, data-driven tools like this can help ensure that the benefits of urban greening reach all residents—not just those in wealthier districts.

 

Overall, this work marks an important step toward integrating artificial intelligence with urban ecology and planning. In the future, researchers hope to refine the model by including more environmental parameters, such as air quality and energy savings, and extending it to other megacities that face similar urban heat challenges.

 

To see more news from Chiba University, visit https://www.cn.chiba-u.jp/en/news/

 

About Professor Katsunori Furuya from Chiba University, Japan

Dr. Katsunori Furuya is a Professor in Landscape Planning at the Graduate School of Horticulture, Chiba University, Japan. He earned his Bachelor of Agriculture in Landscape Architecture in 1985, Master of Agriculture in Landscape Architecture in 1988, and Ph.D. in Environmental Planning in 1991—all from Chiba University. His research focuses on nature conservation, landscape planning and architecture, environmental education, urban green space, ecotourism, and public participation. He has published over 200 peer-reviewed papers and 14 books, with more than 1,000 citations. Among his distinctions are the Japanese Institute of Landscape Architecture Award and Chiba University’s Best Teacher Award.