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One of the main effects of global change is the human interference in the global water cycle, which alters river hydrological dynamics and submits their biological communities to hydric stress. Hydric stress is a pulse disturbance with potential multiple effects on biodiversity and functions in river ecosystems. The presence of habitat specialists may support the response of biological communities to pulse disturbances, maintaining ecological functions more consistently than other communities only having generalists. We tested this general hypothesis in stream communities submitted to increasing hydric stress (normal conditions vs humidity vs desiccation). We used communities with variable proportion of specialist algal and cyanobacterial taxa and tested their resistance to hydric stress by analyzing potential changes on their number of species, biovolume, proportion of intact cells, and photosynthetic variables (basal fluorescence, photosynthetic yield). We also evaluated the recovery of ecological functions (net community primary production, community respiration, phosphorus uptake) once hydric stress conditions ended. Hydric stress caused a slight decrease in the number of species and biovolume of assemblages, but the proportion of intact cells did not significantly change because of the disturbance. Basal fluorescence and photosynthetic yield under hydric stress decreased more markedly in communities without specialist taxa, while communities with habitat specialists resisted better. Metabolism did not remarkably decrease under moderate hydric stress, but dropped by half under desiccation in all communities, having or not specialist taxa. Overall, specialist taxa did provide higher resistance to stress but did not support a distinct recovery of ecological functions. We suggest that this characteristic response is related to the high plasticity of biofilm structures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161952 | DOI Listing |
Plants (Basel)
August 2025
Center of Applied Research in Biosystems (CARB-CIAB), School of Engineering, Autonomous University of Querétaro-Campus Amazcala, Carr. Amazcala-Chichimequillas Km 1.0, El Marqués 76265, Querétaro, Mexico.
Hydrogen peroxide (HO) application in several plant species has been widely studied as a plant biostimulant; however, the use of acoustic emissions related to hydric stress (MHAF) in biostimulating plants has not been widely studied, including the response of plants to the interaction of different stress factors. The aim of the present work was to evaluate the stress response in some morphological, biochemical, and molecular variables of the single or combined application of HO and MHAF in L. plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Direct
August 2025
GreenUPorto - Sustainable Agrifood Production Research Centre - Inov4Agro & Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences University of Porto Porto Portugal.
Cardosins A and B are aspartic proteinases found in cardoon that share high sequence similarity, accumulate in the vacuole, and are responsive to stress conditions. These proteins have a 100 amino acid domain termed Plant Specific Insert (PSI), responsible for their vacuolar targeting. Different PSIs mediate different routes to the vacuole: PSI from cardosin A mediates a Golgi-independent route, while PSI from cardosin B (PSI B) mediates a conventional ER-to-Golgi pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetol Metab Syndr
July 2025
Health Department Elche General Hospital, Elche, Alicante, Spain.
Background: Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) are a severe complication of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), linked to high morbidity and mortality. This study explores biomarkers related to DFU risk and progression to improve management strategies. This study was conducted to identify early biomarkers that could predict DFU risk before ulceration occurs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
July 2025
Centro de Biotecnología y Genómica de Plantas, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM)-Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA/CSIC), Campus de Montegancedo UPM, 28223 Pozuelo de Alarcón, Spain.
Soil salinization poses a notable threat to agriculture. The Cape Verde Islands are located 600 km off the coast of Africa and are characterized by arid environments and high-salinity soils. Here, we find that plants native to these islands accumulate glucuronyl-mannose that protects them from salt stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
June 2025
Laboratorio de Dendrocronología, Universidad Continental, Huancayo, Junín, Peru.
Introduction: Tropical montane cloud forests (TMCFs) host specialized plant species reliant on persistent atmospheric humidity, including fog immersion obligates and relict assemblages. Understanding anatomical and morphological adaptations in TMCF woody angiosperms is critical for elucidating their acclimation strategies to hydric stress under shifting fog regimes. This study investigates interspecific variability in wood and leaf traits among 10 TMCF tree species in Mexico's Medio Monte Natural Protected Area, hypothesizing that distinct anatomical strategies emerge in response to climatic stressors.
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