Temperature and Plant Development 2013
DOI: 10.1002/9781118308240.ch3
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Plant acclimation and adaptation to warm environments

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Cited by 11 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Small changes in temperature, sensed by PhyB and phototropins (Jung et al, 2016;Legris et al, 2016;Fujii et al, 2017), partly inhibit photomorphogenesis in young seedlings. This so-called thermomorphogenic response includes elongated hypocotyls and epinastic cotyledons, and serves to enhance cooling of the young leaves and thus warmth adaptation (for review, see van Zanten et al, 2014;Quint et al, 2016). The key factor in this warmthmediated arrest on de-etiolation is PIF4.…”
Section: High Temperaturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Small changes in temperature, sensed by PhyB and phototropins (Jung et al, 2016;Legris et al, 2016;Fujii et al, 2017), partly inhibit photomorphogenesis in young seedlings. This so-called thermomorphogenic response includes elongated hypocotyls and epinastic cotyledons, and serves to enhance cooling of the young leaves and thus warmth adaptation (for review, see van Zanten et al, 2014;Quint et al, 2016). The key factor in this warmthmediated arrest on de-etiolation is PIF4.…”
Section: High Temperaturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent decades, knowledge on the effect of abiotic stresses on plant survival (tolerance) has advanced significantly but is primarily based on studies focusing on a single stress. Some of these studies have looked into the performance of plants under sublethal stresses, such as mild supra-optimal temperatures, shallow submergence in the light or mild drought ( Blum and Jordan 1985 ; Chapin 1991 ; Van Zanten et al 2013 ). However, a comprehensive understanding of plant performance under sublethal abiotic stresses requires analysing coordinated changes in functional traits both during the occurrence of stress and upon stress recovery, as opposed to one trait at a time ( Tardieu and Tuberosa 2010 ; Pandey et al 2017 ; Thoen et al 2017 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Arabidopsis thaliana ( Arabidopsis ), a mild increase in temperature is known to affect multiple traits such as leaf angle, petiole length, leaf shape, specific leaf area or flowering time ( Van Zanten et al 2013 ; Jagadish et al 2016 ; Quint et al 2016 ; Casal and Balasubramanian 2019 ). Drought may affect allocation of assimilates to roots, leaf relative water content and leaf expansion ( Chaves et al 2003 ; Tardieu et al 2018 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plants are continuously exposed to fluctuating temperatures and need to respond appropriately to diverse cues, from freezing to heat stress (Penfield, 2008;Van Zanten et al, 2014;Casal and Balasubramanian, 2019;Ding et al, 2020). With a few exceptions, plants lack homeostatic mechanisms to maintain body temperature, while almost every process in the plant depends on temperature (Penfield, 2008;Quint et al, 2016;Ibañez et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These function as molecular chaperones to protect native proteins and remove proteins that are damaged beyond repair (Wahid et al, 2007;Zhao et al, 2021). On the physiological level, the balance between carbon gain through photosynthesis and carbon loss through respiration is affected by temperature (Atkin and Tjoelker, 2003;Van Zanten et al, 2014;Perez and Feeley, 2020), and carbon (sugar) status regulates growth responses triggered by high ambient temperature conditions (Hwang et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%