Plant Success

  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • PEOPLE
    • GOVERNANCE
    • CENTRE CHARTER
    • Code of Conduct
    • Privacy Policy
  • RESEARCH
    • Discovering mechanisms and principles of biology
    • Comparative ecology and evolution of plant strategies for water and temperature stress
    • Novel design principles, mathematics, and technologies
    • Genetic basis of domestication and adaptation
    • G-P modelling and prediction
    • Responsible Innovation
  • RESOURCES
    • publications
    • News
    • Annual Reports
    • Reference Materials
      • Authorder – authorship process
      • Laboratory Standard Operating Procedures
      • Won’t Walk Past
    • Legal Fact Sheets
    • Best Practice Guidelines
    • Researcher Development
    • Outreach
    • Videos
  • EVENTS
    • Talking Plant Science
    • People, Plants and the Law
  • OPPORTUNITIES
  • CONTACT
  • Member Login

Centre for Plant Success Webinar Series: Christopher Blackman and Kate Johnson

Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Centre for Plant Success Webinar Series: Christopher Blackman and Kate Johnson

8 June 2023 @ 10:00 am - 11:00 am
  • « The Beyond Intellectual Property Moment in Historical Context
  • Plant Success Early Career Researcher Development Workshop 2023 »

Christopher Blackman

Plant drought experiments: why, what, when, where and how?

Drought is a major environmental stress that negatively impacts plant growth and productivity in natural and agricultural systems. Given drought is increasing in intensity with human-induced global heating, there is an urgent need to better understand how plants respond to water-deficit and identify the traits and mechanisms associated with drought adaptation and survival in drought prone environments.

One way to address this need is to run a drought experiment. But How? In this talk, I describe some of the different field-based and experimental approaches researchers (myself included) use to study plant adaptation and plant responses to drought. These include examining trait variation along environmental gradients of moisture availability, long-term field monitoring, reciprocal transplant experiments and field trials, rain-exclusion, and glasshouse experiments. I highlight some of the benefits and challenges of these different approaches and emphasise the need to understand plant physiological processes when running drought related phenotype selection and genetic studies.

Kate Johnson

A trade-off between growth rate and xylem cavitation resistance in Callitris rhomboidea

The ideal plant water transport system is one that both is efficient, and resistant to drought-induced damage (xylem cavitation), however, species rarely possess both. This may be explained by trade-offs between traits, yet thus far, no proposed trade-off has offered a universal explanation for the lack of both highly drought-resistant and highly efficient water transport systems. In our recent paper, we found evidence for a new trade-off, between growth rate and resistance to xylem cavitation, in the canopies of a drought-resistant tree species (Callitris rhomboidea), presenting an alternative the ‘safety vs. efficiency’ hypothesis. I will discuss what we found, what it means and some possible mechanistic explanations for the trade-off. Understanding whether this trade-off exists within and between species will help us to uncover what drives and limits plant drought resistance more broadly.

This event is open to Centre Members only. If you are a Centre Member who would like to attend, please contact admin@plantsuccess.org for the Zoom invitation.

  • Google Calendar
  • iCalendar
  • Outlook 365
  • Outlook Live

Details

  • Date: 8 June 2023
  • Time:
    10:00 am - 11:00 am

Venue

  • Zoom

Organizer

  • Plant Success
  • Email admin@plantsuccess.org
  • View Organizer Website
  • « The Beyond Intellectual Property Moment in Historical Context
  • Plant Success Early Career Researcher Development Workshop 2023 »

sign up to our newsletter

Stay up to date with our latest events, research publications and job opportunities.

General Enquiries
admin@plantsuccess.org

CONTACT US

The ARC Centre of Excellence for Plant Success in Nature and Agriculture acknowledges the Traditional Owners of Country throughout Australia and their continuing connection to lands, waters and communities. We pay our respect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures and to Elders past, present and emerging.

Copyright @ 2025 ARC Centre of Excellence for Plant Success in Nature and Agriculture

Privacy Policy | Code of Conduct

TOP