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Volatile Organic Compounds as Herbivory Warning Signals in Salvia rosmarinus

Ferretti M, Al-Rashid N, Okonkwo P

Plant Signaling

It means the rosemary in your garden is actively communicating with surrounding plants, and understanding this could help gardeners and farmers use companion planting to naturally reduce pest damage without pesticides.

When a bug starts munching on a rosemary plant, the plant quickly releases invisible chemicals into the air — a kind of silent alarm. Nearby rosemary plants pick up on these airborne signals and switch on their own built-in defenses, essentially bracing for an attack that hasn't reached them yet. This all happens in a matter of hours, entirely without the plants touching each other.

Key Findings

1

Rosemary plants release distinct chemical warning signals (methyl jasmonate) within 30 minutes of herbivore damage

2

Neighboring rosemary plants activate defense genes up to 2 hours before any physical contact with the herbivore

3

The defense priming is triggered solely through airborne chemical signals, requiring no physical connection between plants

chevron_right Technical Summary

Rosemary plants can warn their neighbors of insect attack by releasing chemical signals into the air, and those neighbors respond by activating defenses before any bug even touches them.

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Abstract Preview

Rosemary plants emit distinct methyl jasmonate profiles within 30 minutes of herbivore damage. Neighboring plants receiving these VOCs upregulate proteinase inhibitor genes 2 hours before physical ...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 13 other discoveries — Rosemary plant-signaling, crop-improvement, soil-health +4 more 5 related articles

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