| Literature DB >> 33808069 |
Ofir Katz1,2, Daniel Puppe3, Danuta Kaczorek3,4, Nagabovanalli B Prakash5, Jörg Schaller3.
Abstract
Plants' ability to take up class="Chemical">silicon from the soil, acEntities:
Keywords: cycling; ecosystem; feedback; plants; services; silicon; soil
Year: 2021 PMID: 33808069 PMCID: PMC8066056 DOI: 10.3390/plants10040652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1A simplified model of Si uptake from the soil to the shoot through the transpiration stream, including main transporters and responses to external factors.
Summary of main plant Si extraction and measurement techniques.
| Extractant | Procedure | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 1% Na2CO3 solution | ~30 mg plant material extracted in 1% Na2CO3 solution at 85 °C | [ |
| 0.5 M NaOH solution | ~100 mg plant material extracted in 0.5 M NaOH solution at 85 °C | [ |
| 2-step HF | [ | |
| Lithium metaborate fusion | Plant material ashed at 500 °C. The ash is mixed with lithium meta-tetraborate at 1000 °C. The obtained bead is transferred into nitric acid. | [ |
| Tiron (C6H4Na2O8S2) | Plant material added to tiron solution buffered at pH 10.5 at 85 °C. | [ |
| No extractant, but XRF | ~100 mg plant material homogenized to a powder, but calibration is required. | [ |
Figure 2Different Si deposits occurring in the leaves of grasses. Here SEM-EDX pictures of wheat left at maturity. The red line indicates the scale for the different pictures (50 µm top, 20 µm middle and 200 µm bottom picture). The SEM-EDX analysis results were provided by J. Busse (ZALF, Germany).
Figure 3Form, location and function of Si in plant protection from drought and salinity (left) and from pathogens, fungi and herbivores (right).
Figure 4Schematic overview of Si cycling in undisturbed (unused, natural) and disturbed (used) plant–soil systems. Si bioavailability in soils, and thus Si cycling, is strongly influenced by human impacts, i.e., greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, land use (agriculture, forestry), pollution via wet and dry deposition, and waste and wastewater inputs.
Figure 5Several examples of how the trait (plant Si uptake and accumulation) drives processes that govern ecosystem functions and how these functions contribute to ecosystem services.