Light and Plant Response: Adaptation to Extremes, Phenotypic Plasticity and Plant Competition
A special issue of Plants (ISSN 2223-7747). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Physiology and Metabolism".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (20 March 2023) | Viewed by 25057
Special Issue Editors
Interests: sustainable crop production; legume crops; oilseed crops; biodiversity; crop modeling; biostimulation
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: sustainable agriculture; environmental monitoring; analytical method validation; precision agriculture; soil contamination and soil quality
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Light is one of the most important environmental factors that influence physiological processes, such as photosynthesis, photomorphogenesis, photoperiodism, phototropism and secondary metabolism (Gelderen et al., 2018). Plants have acquired a sophisticated network of photoreceptors that enable them to perceive and respond to environmental change. This is of particular importance under dense planting conditions, such as in most agricultural fields, where aboveground competition for light occurs. Competition for light among plants often induces asymetric competition, which can be successfully corrected by phenotypic plasticity ability. The plant response to light quantity and quality displays a high degree of genetic differentiation. The effect of light intensity on plants has been studied experimentally for over 100 years now. However, there are still substantial gaps in the knowledge concerning the effects of daily light integral to plant reproduction, respiration, chemical composition, belowground organ adaptations, and plant interrelations. Plants constantly coordinate growth in response to light intensity in order to find competition on the canopy level and obtain sufficient or even higher productivity.
This Special Issue of Plants will highlight the influence of light heterogenity on the structure and dynamics of plant populations and species coexistence explored by mechanistic or prediction approaches. We welcome original research papers from leaf phenology to the ecosystem scale, based on experimental, theoretical, and modeling approaches, as well as review articles.
With the aim of strengthening the scientific basis for plant response to light, we welcome papers that enhance our understanding of the following keywords.
Dr. Agnieszka Klimek-Kopyra
Dr. Tomasz Czech
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- phenotypic plasticity
- positive or negative plant interactions
- species coexistence and biodiversity
- light interception
- environmental cost of light limitation
- plant modeling
- physiological and molecular approach of light heterogeneity
- LEDs
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