Plant Architecture
PubMedUnderstanding how plants control their shape and branching could lead to crops that grow more efficiently, trees better suited to urban spaces, and gardens designed with plants optimized for resilience.
Jill Harrison is a scientist who asks a deceptively simple question: why do plants grow the way they do? She looks at the genetic instructions that tell a plant when to sprout a new branch or how to spread its leaves, and traces those instructions back through evolutionary history. By understanding these rules, scientists may one day be able to fine-tune plant shapes for farming, landscaping, or helping ecosystems recover.
Key Findings
Jill Harrison's research focuses on the genetic and developmental mechanisms that control plant architecture — how branches, leaves, and roots are arranged.
Her work takes an evolutionary perspective, comparing how these architectural traits have changed across different plant lineages over time.
The research is based at Bristol University, suggesting an active academic program with potential implications for crop science and evolutionary biology.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researcher Jill Harrison at Bristol University studies how plants grow and branch, and how these traits evolved over millions of years. Her work helps explain why plants look the way they do — from the spread of a tree's canopy to the branching of roots underground.
Abstract Preview
Interview with Jill Harrison, who studies plant architecture and evolution at Bristol University.
open_in_new Read full abstract on PubMedAbstract copyright held by the original publisher.
Was this useful?
Chloroplast Genome Editing Eliminates Gluten Immunogenicity in Triticum aestivum
It could mean that people with celiac disease — roughly 1 in 100 worldwide — may one day safely eat bread made from real wheat, without sacrificing the taste...