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The effects of multifactorial stress combination on rice and maize
Summary
This review examines how plants cope with multiple simultaneous environmental stresses — including drought, heat, flooding, and pollutants like microplastics — finding that combined stressors often cause more harm than individual stresses acting alone.
ABSTRACT The complexity of environmental factors affecting plants is gradually increasing due to global warming, an increase in the number and intensity of climate change-driven weather events, such as droughts, heat waves, and floods, and the accumulation of different pollutants. The impact of multiple stress conditions on plants was recently termed ‘multifactorial stress combination’ (MFSC) and defined as the occurrence of three or more stressors that impact plants simultaneously or sequentially. We recently reported that with the increased number and complexity of different stressors, the growth and survival of Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings declines; even if the level of each individual stress is low enough to have no significant effect on plants. This finding is alarming since it reveals that MFSCs of different low-level stressors could impact crops and cause a dramatic reduction in overall growth. However, whether MFSC would impact commercial crop cultivars has not been studied. Here, we reveal that a MFSC of 5 different low level abiotic stresses (salinity, heat, the herbicide paraquat, phosphorus deficiency, and the heavy metal cadmium), applied in an increasing level of complexity, has a significant negative impact on the growth and biomass of a commercial rice ( Oryza sativa ) cultivar and a maize ( Zea mays ) hybrid. We further report on the first proteomics analysis of MFSC in plants that identified over 300 proteins common to all 4- and 5-MFSCs. Taken together our findings reveal that the impacts of MFSC on two different crop species are severe, and that MFSC may significantly affect agricultural productivity.
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