USA: American researchers breed heat-resistant tomatoes

Published 2024년 11월 13일

Tridge summary

Researchers at Brown University have discovered that the Tamaulipas tomato variety is more resistant to extreme heat during the pollen tube growth phase, a finding that could help protect food resources as climate instability reduces agricultural productivity. The team identified the molecular mechanisms behind this heat tolerance, and now plans to develop a small molecule to help pollen in plants better withstand heat waves. This could be a key strategy for safeguarding food resources in the face of climate change.
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Original content

By studying tomato varieties that bear fruit in an extremely hot season, biologists from Brown University (USA) determined the phase of the growth cycle when tomatoes are most vulnerable to extreme heat, as well as the molecular mechanisms that make plants more resistant to high temperatures. This is reported by Science Daily. Researchers say the discovery, detailed in a study in Current Biology, could shape a key strategy for protecting food resources in the face of climate instability. Agricultural productivity is particularly vulnerable to climate change, the study notes, with rising temperatures projected to reduce crop yields by 2.5% to 16% for every additional 1 degree Celsius of seasonal warming. Scientists took some lessons from evolution to experiment with how best to speed up the adaptation process of tomato plant varieties, explained study author Sorel V. Yimga Wonkap is a research associate in molecular biology, cell biology, and biochemistry at Brown. It would take a ...
Source: Agrotimes

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