phenotypic-plasticity
Phenotypic plasticity is a plant's ability to alter its physical form, physiology, or behavior in response to environmental conditions without changing its underlying genetic sequence. This capacity is especially critical in plants, which are sessile organisms unable to escape stressors like drought, temperature shifts, or nutrient scarcity, making developmental flexibility a primary survival strategy. Understanding phenotypic plasticity helps researchers unravel how plants adapt to changing climates and informs efforts to breed more resilient crops.
open_in_new WikipediaHeterophyllous plants reorganize plant trait coordination between f...
Water lilies and arrowhead plants in your local pond or water garden are quietly running two comp...
Species-specific, accession-specific, and common responses of folia...
Tansy, bittersweet nightshade, and black poplar each mount a chemically distinct defense when bug...