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Plants prioritise keeping their flowers cool during hot, dry weather

Under heat and water stress, plants sacrifice their leaves to keep their sexual organs cool – a strategy that we could harness to protect crops from climate change  

By Richard Kemeny

10 December 2021 , updated 4 January 2022

Young soybean plant with flowers, close up macro. Small growing flowering soy, closeup. Purple soybeans bloom

A young soybean plant

nnattalli/Shutterstock

In hot, dry weather, plants sacrifice their leaves to cool and protect flowers, which contain their sexual organs. The strategy could be harnessed to defend crop yields against climate change.

Plants lose nearly all the water they absorb through evaporation via pores known as stomata. This process, known as transpiration, cools the plant and helps them suck up more nutrient-filled water from the ground, like drinking through a straw.

When the weather is hot, the stomata open to release water and heat. But when water is…

Article amended on 4 January 2022

We have replaced the photo with one showing the correct species of plant.

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