| Literature DB >> 24867639 |
Abstract
Mineral malnutrition stemming from undiversified plant-based diets is a top global challenpan>ge. Inpan> C3 plants (e.g., rice, wheat), elevated concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (eCO2) reduce protein and nitrogen concentrations, and can increase the total non-structural carbohydrates (TNC; mainly starch, sugars). However, contradictory findings have obscured the effect of eCO2 on the ionome-the mineral and trace-element composition-of plants. Consequently, CO2-induced shifts in plant quality have been ignored in the estimation of the impact of global change on humans. This study shows that eCO2 reduces the overall mineral concentrations (-8%, 95% confidence interval: -9.1 to -6.9, p<0.00001) and increases TNC:minerals > carbon:minerals in C3 plants. The meta-analysis of 7761 observations, including 2264 observations at state of the art FACE centers, covers 130 species/cultivars. The attained statistical power reveals that the shift is systemic and global. Its potential to exacerbate the prevalence of 'hidden hunger' and obesity is discussed.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.001.Entities:
Keywords: crops; elevated CO2; human nutrition; ionome; iron; zinc
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24867639 PMCID: PMC4034684 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.02245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Figure 1.Statistical power and the effect of CO2 on the plant ionome.
The effect of elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations (eCO2) on the mean concentration of minerals in plants plotted (with the respective 95% confidence intervals [CI]) against the power of statistical analysis. The figure reflects data on 25 minerals in edible and foliar tissues of 125 C3 plant species and cultivars. The true CO2 effect is hidden in the very low and the low power regions. As the statistical power increases, the true effect becomes progressively clearer: the systemic shift of the plant ionome.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.003
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.015
Figure 2.The effect of CO2 on individual chemical elements in plants.
Change (%) in the mean concentration of chemical elements in plants grown in eCO2 relative to those grown at ambient levels. Unless noted otherwise, all results in this and subsequent figures are for C3 plants. Average ambient and elevated CO2 levels across all the studies are 368 ppm and 689 ppm respectively. The results reflect the plant data (foliar and edible tissues, FACE and non-FACE studies) from four continents. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean (calculated using the number of mean observations for each element). The number of mean and total (with all the replicates) observations for each element is as follows: C(35/169), N(140/696), P(152/836), K(128/605), Ca(139/739), S(67/373), Mg(123/650), Fe(125/639), Zn(123/702), Cu(124/612), and Mn(101/493). An element is shown individually if the statistical power for a 5% effect size for the element is >0.40. The ‘ionome’ bar reflects all the data on 25 minerals (all the elements in the dataset except of C and N). All the data are available at Dryad depository and at GitHub. Copies of all the original sources for the data are available upon request.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.004
Figure 4.The effect of CO2 on edible tissues.
Change (%) in the mean concentration of chemical elements in edible parts of crops grown in eCO2 relative to those grown at ambient levels. Average ambient and elevated CO2 levels across all the crop edible studies are 373 ppm and 674 ppm respectively. Other details are in the legends for Figures 2 and 3.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.006
Figure 8.The systemic aspect of the CO2 effect.
Change (%) in the mean concentration of minerals in plants grown in eCO2 relative to those grown at ambient levels. All the results in the figure reflect the combined data for the foliar and the edible tissues. The number of total mean observations (m) for all the measured minerals across all the studies for each crop/plant group, experiment type, country, or region is shown with the respective statistical power. Country specific and regional results reflect all the FACE and Open Top Chamber (OTC) studies carried in any given country/region. The number of total observations (with replicates) for all the minerals (not counting C and N) for each country is as follows: Australia (926), China (193), Finland (144), Germany (908), and USA (1156). Other details are in the legends for Figures 2 and 3.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.010
Figure 9.Testing for publication bias.
A funnel plot of the effect size (the natural log of the response ratio) plotted against the number of replicates/sample sizes (n) for each study and each mineral in the dataset for C3 plants. The plot provides a simple visual evaluation of the distribution of effect sizes. The blue line represents the mean effect size of eCO2 on mineral concentrations: the decline of 8.39% (yielding the decline of 8.04% when back transferred from the log-form). The symmetrical funnel shape of the plot around the mean effect size indicates the publication bias in the dataset is insignificant (Egger et al., 1997).
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.011
Comparing the effects of CO2 on two plant quality indicators.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.012
| Study/species | C:N (%) | TNC:protein (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | 125 | ||
| 6 | 26 | ||
| 17 | 53 | ||
| wheat grain (low N) | −10 | 47 | |
| wheat grain (high N) | −18 | 7 | |
| wheat grain | 9 | 6 | |
| 27 C3 species | 28 | 90 | |
| meta-analysis | 25 | 54 | |
| meta-analysis | 27 | 39 |
CO2-induced changes (%) in C:N (a quality indicator often used in CO2 studies) and in TNC:protein (a rarely used but nutritionally important indicator) for wheat grains and for foliar tissues of various plants. The results shows that in the same plant tissue, eCO2 can increase TNC:protein up to several-fold > C:N. Significant CO2-induced shifts in the ratio of major macronutrients are probable. Hence, it is important for CO2 studies to start accessing and reporting changes in TNC:protein.
in lieu of protein, N content is used.
Comparing the effect of CO2 to the effect of adding ‘a spoonful of sugars.’
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.013
| Plant quality indicator | Effect of adding 5g of TNC (%) | Effect of elevated CO2 (%) |
|---|---|---|
| TNC | 2.6 | 1 to 15 |
| TNC:protein | 7 | 6 to 47 |
| TNC:minerals | 7 | 6 to 28 |
| protein | −4.8 | −14 to −9 |
| minerals | −4.8 | −10 to −5 |
| TNC | 27 | 15 to 75 |
| TNC:protein | 33 | 26 to 125 |
| TNC:minerals | 33 | 24 to 98 |
| protein | −4.8 | −19 to −14 |
| minerals | −4.8 | −12 to −5 |
Changes (%) in various plant quality indicators caused by: (1) Adding a teaspoon of TNC (∼5g of starch-and-sugars mixture) per 100g of dry mass (DM) of plant tissue, an:d (2) growing plants in twice-ambient CO2 atmosphere. Changes due to the addition of TNC are calculated assuming:the baseline TNC content of 65% for grains and tubers, and 15% for foliar tissues. The C content is assumed to be ∼42% for plant tissues and TNC.
Studies covered in the meta-analysis of CO2 effects on the plant ionome.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02245.014
| Species | Common name | Crop | +CO2 | Country | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| maple tree | No | 260 | |||
| red maple tree | No | 200 | USA | ||
| grass | No | 340 | UK | ||
| grass | No | 250 | |||
| alder tree | No | 350 | UK | ||
| rainforest tree | No | 440 | |||
| shrub | No | 180 | USA | ||
| thale cress | No | 450 | |||
| thale cress | No | 330 | |||
| birch tree | No | 349 | Finland | ||
| grass | No | 230 | |||
| cheatgrass | No | 150 | |||
| cheatgrass | No | 150 | |||
| heather shrub | No | 200 | |||
| red bud tree | No | 200 | USA | ||
| chrysanth | No | 325 | |||
| dogwood tree | No | 200 | USA | ||
| beech tree | No | 260 | |||
| beech tree | No | 300 | |||
| meadow fescue | No | 320 | |||
| grass | No | 340 | UK | ||
| rainforest tree | No | 440 | |||
| Elliott's milkpea | No | 325 | USA | ||
| larch tree | No | 335 | Japan | ||
| peppergrass | No | 339 | |||
| sweetgum tree | No | 200 | USA | ||
| sweetgum tree | No | 167 | USA | ||
| sweetgum tree | No | 156–200 | USA | ||
| tulip tree | No | 325 | |||
| grass | No | 320 | |||
| grass | No | 290 | Germany | ||
| white lupin | No | 550 | |||
| shrub | No | 180 | USA | ||
| fern | No | 650 | |||
| geranium | No | 330 | |||
| spruce tree | No | 350 | |||
| spruce tree | No | 300 | |||
| spruce tree | No | 300 | |||
| spruce tree | No | 350 | |||
| pine tree | No | 346 | USA | ||
| pine tree | No | 350 | USA | ||
| pine tree | No | 331 | |||
| pine tree | No | 225 | Finland | ||
| loblolly pine tree | No | 200 | USA | ||
| pine tree | No | 200 | USA | ||
| grass | No | 340 | UK | ||
| grass | No | 340 | UK | ||
| fern | No | 320 | |||
| fern | No | 320 | |||
| fern | No | 320 | |||
| oak tree | No | 350 | USA | ||
| oak tree | No | 350 | USA | ||
| oak tree | No | 350 | USA | ||
| oak tree | No | 350 | USA | ||
| oak tree | No | 350 | USA | ||
| cork oak tree | No | 350 | |||
| grass | No | 230 | |||
| grass | No | 230 | |||
| grass | No | 330 | |||
| berseem clover | No | 250 | India | ||
| red clover | No | 320 | |||
| white clover | No | 320 | |||
| white clover | No | 290 | Germany | ||
| white clover | No | 615 | |||
| white clover | No | 330 | |||
| macrophyte | No | 610 | |||
| celery | Yes | 670 | |||
| mustard | Yes | 500 | India | ||
| rapeseed | Yes | 615 | |||
| rapeseed | Yes | 615 | |||
| rapeseed | Yes | 615 | |||
| oilseed rape | Yes | 106 | Germany | ||
| turnip | Yes | 600 | |||
| orange tree | Yes | 300 | USA | ||
| citrus tree | Yes | 600 | |||
| cucumber | Yes | 650 | |||
| carrot | Yes | 600 | |||
| strawberry | Yes | 600 | |||
| soybean | Yes | 360 | USA | ||
| soybean | Yes | 200 | |||
| cotton | Yes | 180 | USA | ||
| barley | Yes | 175 | Germany | ||
| barley | Yes | 334 | Germany | ||
| barley | Yes | 334 | Germany | ||
| barley | Yes | 400 | |||
| barley | Yes | 350 | |||
| barley | Yes | 170 | Germany | ||
| lettuce | Yes | 308 | |||
| lettuce | Yes | 350 | |||
| lettuce | Yes | 308 | |||
| lettuce | Yes | 600 | |||
| tomato | Yes | 600 | |||
| tomato | Yes | 600 | |||
| tomato | Yes | 360 | |||
| tomato | Yes | 450 | |||
| mango tree | Yes | 350 | |||
| mango tree | Yes | 350 | |||
| alfalfa | Yes | 615 | |||
| alfalfa | Yes | 100 | UK | ||
| rice | Yes | 200 | China | ||
| rice | Yes | 205–260 | Japan | ||
| rice | Yes | 250 | Japan | ||
| rice | Yes | 210 | Bangladesh | ||
| rice | Yes | 500 | |||
| rice | Yes | 296 | Philippines | ||
| rice | Yes | 200 | China | ||
| rice | Yes | 350 | |||
| rice | Yes | 210 | Bangladesh | ||
| rice | Yes | 500 | |||
| rice | Yes | 210 | Bangladesh | ||
| rice | Yes | 500 | |||
| rice | Yes | 500 | |||
| rice | Yes | 200 | China | ||
| rice | Yes | 200 | China | ||
| rice | Yes | 200 | China | ||
| rice | Yes | 500 | |||
| rice | Yes | 500 | |||
| bean | Yes | 340 | |||
| bean | Yes | 870 | |||
| radish | Yes | 600 | |||
| radish | Yes | 380 | |||
| radish | Yes | 600 | |||
| buckwheat | Yes | 615 | |||
| rye | Yes | 615 | |||
| tomato | Yes | 590 | |||
| tomato | Yes | 590 | |||
| potato | Yes | 500 | |||
| potato | Yes | 170 | Germany | ||
| potato | Yes | 278-281 | Sweden | ||
| potato | Yes | 305-320 | Europe | ||
| potato | Yes | 345 | USA | ||
| potato | Yes | 345 | USA | ||
| sorghum | Yes | 360 | USA | ||
| spinach | Yes | 250 | India | ||
| fenugreek | Yes | 250 | India | ||
| wheat | Yes | 175 | Germany | ||
| wheat | Yes | 200 | China | ||
| wheat | Yes | 150 | Germany | ||
| wheat | Yes | 150 | Germany | ||
| wheat | Yes | 350 | |||
| wheat | Yes | 170 | Germany | ||
| wheat | Yes | 305-320 | Sweden | ||
| wheat | Yes | 250 | India | ||
| wheat | Yes | 166 | Australia | ||
| wheat | Yes | 615 | |||
| wheat | Yes | 278 | Germany | ||
| wheat | Yes | 300 | Europe | ||
| wheat | Yes | 350 | |||
| wheat | Yes | 334 | Germany | ||
| wheat | Yes | 334 | Germany | ||
| wheat | Yes | 350 | |||
| wheat | Yes | 410 | |||
| wheat | Yes | 200 | China | ||
| wheat | Yes | 166 | Australia | ||
| wheat | Yes | 166 | Australia | ||
| wheat | Yes | 166 | Australia | ||
| wheat | Yes | 166 | Australia |
The table provides species name, common name, the type of experimental set up, the level of CO2 enrichment, and indicates whether the species is a crop. Countries are listed only for FACE and OTC type experiments with ‘Europe’ accounting for combined data from Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Sweden, and the UK.