Plants adapt their water consumption to environmental conditions by counting and calculating environmental stimuli with their guard cells. Plants control their water consumption via adjustable pores ...
Plants control their water consumption via adjustable pores (stomata), which are formed from pairs of guard cells. They open their stomata when there is a sufficient water supply and enough light for ...
Stomata are microscopic pores on the leaf surface that regulate gas exchange and water loss, balancing CO2 uptake for photosynthesis with transpiration. Each pore is flanked by a pair of guard cells ...
Stomata, i.e., tiny pores on the surface of leaves in land plants, play a vital role in plant development as well as in the regulation of gas exchange between plants and the atmosphere 1,2,3,4,5.
With intensifying global warming and climate change, drought has become a major threat to global agriculture, impacting crop yields and food security. To survive such adverse events, plants have ...
Using optogenetics, researchers have detected a new acid sensor in plant cells that is addressing a cell-internal calcium store. When plants are infected by pathogens, suffer from a lack of water or ...
Left: A blue light pulse of 0.1 seconds triggers a calcium signal (red) in guard cells, which is followed by an anion current (black). Right: The influx of calcium into the cell promotes the release ...
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