PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Smart hormone technologies could help sugarcane survive droughts and floods

2025-10-23
(Press-News.org) As climate extremes become more frequent, sugarcane growers face a double challenge: droughts that parch their crops and floods that drown them. A new review highlights how applying plant hormones from outside the plant, rather than waiting for natural processes—can strengthen sugarcane’s ability to cope with both too little and too much water.

The study, published in Agricultural Ecology and Environment, examines how exogenous phytohormones such as abscisic acid (ABA), gibberellins (GA), and auxins can improve sugarcane’s drought and waterlogging tolerance. These tiny signaling molecules regulate growth, photosynthesis, and stress defenses. When sprayed on leaves or delivered to roots, they can trigger the same internal mechanisms that help plants conserve water, maintain photosynthetic activity, and repair cellular damage.

For instance, external ABA applications have been shown to boost the plant’s antioxidant defenses and osmotic balance, limiting damage from reactive oxygen species that accumulate during drought. GA helps sustain shoot and root growth under stress, while auxins support root development in flooded soils. Together, these treatments could help stabilize yields in regions facing erratic rainfall.

However, traditional application methods, such as uniform field spraying—are often inefficient and poorly timed. The authors point to emerging technologies that can deliver hormones precisely when and where they are needed. Robotic systems equipped with sensors can detect early signs of stress and apply hormones directly to affected plants. Meanwhile, nanotechnology is being developed to encapsulate phytohormones in tiny carriers that release them gradually over time, protecting the compounds from degradation and providing longer-lasting protection during prolonged stress.

These “smart delivery” systems may transform how crops like sugarcane are managed under changing climates. By combining robotics, nanotechnology, and plant biochemistry, scientists hope to create precision tools that use minimal resources while maximizing plant resilience.

“Understanding and manipulating hormone signaling offers one of the most promising ways to protect high-value crops such as sugarcane from water stress,” the authors note. “Integrating advanced delivery systems can make these approaches scalable and sustainable for real-world farming.”

The review calls for more field-based studies to refine hormone dosages, timing, and combinations tailored to different sugarcane varieties and environments. With continued innovation, exogenous phytohormones and smart delivery technologies could help ensure a more reliable sugar supply in the face of global climate uncertainty.

 

=== 

Journal Reference: Misra V, Mall AK. 2025. Application of phytohormones exogenously to ameliorate sugarcane's response to water stress. Agricultural Ecology and Environment 1: e006  https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/aee-0025-0006  

 

=== 

About Agricultural Ecology and Environment: 

Agricultural Ecology and Environment is a multidisciplinary platform for communicating advances in fundamental and applied research on the agroecological environment, focusing on the interactions between agroecosystems and the environment. It is dedicated to advancing the understanding of the complex interactions between agricultural practices and ecological systems. The journal aims to provide a comprehensive and cutting-edge forum for researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and stakeholders from diverse fields such as agronomy, ecology, environmental science, soil science, and sustainable development. 

Follow us on Facebook, X, and Bluesky. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Updated CPR guidelines released for pediatric and neonatal emergency care and resuscitation

2025-10-23
DALLAS and ITASCA, IL, Oct. 23, 2025 — The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Heart Association (the Association), a relentless force changing the future of health for everyone everywhere, have published updated guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care for newborn and pediatric populations. The “2025 American Heart Association and American Academy of Pediatrics Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care” mark a comprehensive update to the guidelines for pediatric basic and advanced life support and neonatal resuscitation since 2020. Experts from each ...

Psilocybin plus mindfulness shows promise for healthcare worker depression

2025-10-23
Frontline healthcare workers struggling with depression after the COVID-19 pandemic experienced significant relief from a treatment combining psilocybin group therapy with mindfulness training, according to a new study from Huntsman Mental Health Institute at University of Utah Health. Doctors and nurses who received this controlled, group psilocybin therapy along with an eight-week Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction program saw far greater improvements than those who only learned mindfulness techniques. "Depression and burnout have long been serious problems for healthcare workers. When the pandemic only worsened these effects, ...

New study documents functional extinction of two critically endangered coral species following record heatwave in Florida

2025-10-23
A new research paper published in Science reports the functional extinction of Acropora corals from Florida’s Coral Reef. Scientists documented catastrophic mortality of these critically endangered corals following a record-setting marine heatwave in 2023 that marked the ninth mass bleaching event for the region. Both Acropora coral species — staghorn (Acropora cervicornis) and elkhorn (Acropora palmata) — are important reef-builders in Florida and the Caribbean and have been a major focus of recent coral restoration efforts.  Led by the National Oceanic ...

UC Irvine researchers find new Alzheimer’s mechanism linked to brain inflammation

2025-10-23
Irvine, Calif., Oct. 23, 2025 — Researchers at the University of California, Irvine, have uncovered an unexpected molecular partnership that reshapes scientists’ understanding of how brain inflammation arises in Alzheimer’s disease. In a study published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a team of scientists led by assistant researcher Ruiming Zhao and Dr. Steve Goldstein, vice chancellor for health affairs at UC Irvine, discovered that amyloid precursor proteins – best known as the source of amyloid-beta ...

Ancient stone tools trace Paleolithic Pacific migration

2025-10-23
CORVALLIS, Ore – A new analysis of stone tools offers strong evidence for the theory that ancient people from the Pacific Rim traveled a coastal route from East Asia during the last ice age to become North America’s First Peoples, according to a paper published this week in the journal Science Advances. “This study puts the First Americans back into the global story of the Paleolithic – not as outliers – but as participants in a shared technological legacy,” said Loren Davis, professor of anthropology at Oregon ...

New ‘molecular dam’ stops energy leaks in nanocrystals

2025-10-23
A collaborative team of scientists from the University of Colorado Boulder, the University of California Irvine, and Fort Lewis College, led by RASEI Fellow Gordana Dukovic, has found a way to slow energy leaks that have impeded the use of tiny nanocrystals in light-driven chemical and energy applications. As described in a new article published October 13 in the journal Chem, the team has used a molecule that strongly binds to the nanocrystal’s surface, essentially acting like a ‘dam’ to hold back the energy stored in the charge-separated state formed after light absorption. This technique extends the lifetime of the charge separation ...

Hidden toxins in e-cigarette fluids may harm lung cells

2025-10-23
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- A study by University of California, Riverside, scientists has found that two toxic chemicals can form when the main ingredient in most e-cigarette fluids is heated, and that these compounds can harm human lung cells. The researchers characterized the toxicity of methylglyoxal and acetaldehyde, both known toxins that can be generated during the heating of vaping liquids containing propylene glycol. While these chemicals are already recognized as harmful in other settings, their impact during vaping has not been well understood until now. Using lab-grown human airway ...

Ancient Mediterranean origin of the “London Underground Mosquito”

2025-10-23
A new genetic study overturns the myth of the “London Underground Mosquito,” revealing that this common urban insect originated not below the cities of modern Europe, but in ancient Mediterranean civilizations more than a thousand years ago, according to a new study. Modern cities are reshaping ecosystems, driving rapid adaptation in many species. A striking example is the northern house mosquito, Culex pipiens, which exists in two forms: the bird-biting C. pipiens f. pipiens (pipiens), adapted to open-air, seasonal environments, and the human-biting C. pipiens f. molestus ...

Functional extinction of Florida’s reef-building corals following the 2023 marine heatwave

2025-10-23
The record-breaking 2023 marine heatwave has killed nearly all of Florida’s critically endangered Acropora coral colonies, marking the species’ functional extinction in Florida’s Coral Reef (FCR), researchers report. The findings sound a dire warning for the future of coral ecosystems in our rapidly warming oceans. The increasing frequency and intensity of extreme climate events, such as marine heat waves, are severely undermining the health, structure, and resilience of ecosystems worldwide. Coral reefs, among the most heat-sensitive marine environments, ...

Duck-billed dinosaur “mummies” preserve fleshy hide and hooves in thin layers of clay

2025-10-23
New paleontological findings offer insights into Wyoming’s “dinosaur mummies,” revealing that the stunningly preserved skin, spikes, and hooves of duck-billed dinosaurs are not fossilized flesh at all, but delicate clay molds formed by microbes as the creatures decayed, researchers report. Soft-tissue preservation in fossils usually occurs in fine-grained, oxygen-poor environments such as lagoons or seabeds, which enable the fossilization of delicate structures like feathers and skin. However, the so-called “dinosaur ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Development of new candidate agent for lethal and severe cutaneous drug reaction

Teenagers and young adults who use cannabis have a higher risk of progressing to regular tobacco use

Baltic countries lead the way in supporting media freedom internationally, according to new index

New center aims to make the future of trauma survivors brighter

Research-backed defense of DEI programs published today

From sewage to super soil: Dual breakthrough in phosphorus recycling unveiled by Chinese research teams

Sustainable use of woody biochar boosts soil carbon and crop yields in pepper fields

Smart hormone technologies could help sugarcane survive droughts and floods

Updated CPR guidelines released for pediatric and neonatal emergency care and resuscitation

Psilocybin plus mindfulness shows promise for healthcare worker depression

New study documents functional extinction of two critically endangered coral species following record heatwave in Florida

UC Irvine researchers find new Alzheimer’s mechanism linked to brain inflammation

Ancient stone tools trace Paleolithic Pacific migration

New ‘molecular dam’ stops energy leaks in nanocrystals

Hidden toxins in e-cigarette fluids may harm lung cells

Ancient Mediterranean origin of the “London Underground Mosquito”

Functional extinction of Florida’s reef-building corals following the 2023 marine heatwave

Duck-billed dinosaur “mummies” preserve fleshy hide and hooves in thin layers of clay

Fatty winter snacks may trick the body into packing on the pounds

Hitchhiking DNA picked up by gene, saves a species from extinction

Cellarity publishes framework for discovery of cell state-correcting medicines in Science

Peatlands’ ‘huge reservoir’ of carbon at risk of release

Dinosaurs in New Mexico thrived until the very end, study shows

Miniscule wave machine opens big scientific doors

Sanger Institute: Origins of the ‘London Underground mosquito’ uncovered, shedding light on West Nile virus transmission

Global study reveals tempo of invasive species‘ impacts

Study uncovers origins of urban human-biting mosquito, sheds light on uptick in West Nile virus spillover from birds to humans

It’s not the pain, it’s the mindset: How attitude outweighs pain

Researchers find certain ecological experiments may be too human-centric

Gender equality universally linked to physical capacity

[Press-News.org] Smart hormone technologies could help sugarcane survive droughts and floods