Credit: Cornell University
A
new study led by Cornell University is the first to analyze plant spore
dispersion at its source, where rain droplets shake flexible leaves to
initially disperse pathogens.
When raindrops hit a leaf of
a wheat plant infected with rust—a pathogenic spore that has decimated crops
globally—the leaf flutters, creating tiny swirling vortices of air that
disperse the spores, where they could end up infecting healthy plants.
An analysis of this effect using high-speed cameras, described in Science
Advances, could be a first step toward designing a strategy to help reduce
pathogens—not just spores but also bacteria, oomycetes and viruses—from
spreading from leaves.
Applying theoretical analysis to the high-speed camera footage, the researchers were able to predict the trajectory of spores and how they are carried by a swirling motion created by the vibrating leaves. "It's kind of a tiny tornado in the air," said Sunghwan Jung, the paper's corresponding author and professor at Cornell. Zixuan Wu, a doctoral student in Jung's lab, is the paper's first author.
Credit: Cornell University
For their analysis, researchers
borrowed techniques typically used to study geophysical flows, which are
large-scale oceanic and atmospheric air currents, and downsized them by a few
orders of magnitude to understand and predict the swirls they found in the air
around a bouncing wheat leaf.
"We describe the magnitudes of
these kinds of swirling motion, and then when they will form and how spores
move around, so everything is predictable," Jung said.
Because of restrictions to working
with actual live spores, the researchers used miniature hollow glass particles
to mimic spores. They used their methods to better understand how many spores
might come off a leaf, where they might go and how they move away from an
infected plant. Ultimately, the study may inform future research that finds a
way to prevent spores from infecting healthy plants at their source.
"We couldn't figure out the solution yet," Jung said. "But if we can control these kinds of vortex structures around the leaf somehow, then we can reduce the spread of spores to new plants."
Source: 'Tiny tornadoes' around leaves can spread deadly plant pathogens (phys.org)
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