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FLORA AND FAUNA
Flowers use nectar as a weapon of distraction
by Amy Wallace
Washington (UPI) Aug 21, 2017


Mechanism identified for plants to recover from heat stress
Washington (UPI) Aug 21, 2017 - A team of researchers from the University of Amherst, including Chinese and Indian biochemists, have discovered how plants adapt quickly to heat stress to survive.

Identifying the mechanisms of heat tolerance on plants is important because high temperature damage to crops is increasing due to climate change.

"One of our most interesting findings is the fact that stressed plants not only need to produce new proteins to survive the stress, they need to make them right away," Elizabeth Vierling, molecular biologist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, said in a press release.

"We found that a delay of even six hours of new protein translation will inhibit optimal growth and reproduction. The plants might not outright die, but they are severely impaired without the rapid synthesis of these new proteins."

Researchers used biochemical and next-generation sequencing methods to examine changes in protein translation and gene expression in wild type Arabidopsis plants and in mutants that have lost their ability to survive high temperatures.

The study found that the mutated gene specifies a "translation factor," a protein required by all organisms including humans, to synthesize other proteins.

"So we found out more about the general, universal process of protein translation," the study authors wrote. "Ours is the first study of this type investigating this aspect of protein synthesis. It was significant to find that this translation factor is needed for recovery of plants from stress, and that it may have a previously unrecognized role in translating specific proteins."

New research has found that nectar plays a different role than previously thought -- by acting as the ultimate weapon of distraction for flowers.

Nectar is the honey produced by flowers that provides a come-on to bees and other insects to attract them to pollinate the flower. But researchers found recently that nectar plays a larger role beyond the obvious one.

"Contrary to the accepted wisdom, the role of nectar seems in this instance to not be just about attracting and rewarding pollinating insects," Scott Armbruster, professor of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Portsmouth, said in a press release,

"It seems nectar and nectaries, the glands which produce it, attract herbivores that would otherwise feed on other flower parts. Thus the nectar and nectaries may be acting as a decoy. Like nectar thieves and robbers, the herbivores we observed have a high energy demand, and because nectar is rich in nutrients, it appears flowers are using it as a distraction, to keep herbivores away from critical reproducing parts of the flower, which are also edible.They are sacrificing their nectar and nectaries for the greater goal of maintaining other floral parts that are critical for attracting pollinators, and hence being pollinated."

Scientists studied the role played by herbivores such as sawflies that eat petals and nectar from an Iris bulleyana flower in the Himalayas.

The study, published in the August edition of Biology Letters, found that 98 percent of the flowers studied in natural conditions were damaged by herbivores, but in 85 percent of the flowers, the damage was limited to just the nectaries.

The findings suggest that the nectar was being used to protect more critical parts of the plant. When sawfly herbivores grazed on the petals, they were damaged, causing fewer pollinators to visit the flower. Having the calorie rich nectar as a distraction protected the petals from damage.

"The results are clear that floral tissues with a higher reproductive importance are essentially protected through the presence of sacrificial parts, the nectaries and nectar," Armbruster said.

FLORA AND FAUNA
Hunter Island penguin species never actually existed, study says
Washington (UPI) Aug 16, 2017
Almost 35 years after the lost "Hunter Island" penguin was discovered, scientists have determined the species never actually existed. New analysis suggests the specimen, unearthed on Tasmania's Hunter Island in 1983, is comprised of bones from three living penguin species. The revelation was made possible by new techniques for extracting and analyzing ancient DNA samples. Scienti ... read more

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