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Science Friday

Soil Future, Plant Feelings, Science Fair. Sept 14, 2018, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.46.3K Ratings

🗓️ 14 September 2018

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Climate change is increasing temperatures and causing heavier rainfalls across the country. Scientists are studying how these changes will affect different natural resources, including the soil ecosystem. For example, in Wisconsin, soil erosion is predicted to double by 2050 due to heavier rainfalls, according to a report by the Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts. Agricultural scientist Andrea Basche talks about how soil formation and health is tied to climate. She joins microbiologist Kristen DeAngelis, who is conducting a long-term study to determine how increased temperatures affect soil microbiome, how to protect this resource, and what our soil reserves might look like in the next fifty years. Plants have a unique challenge in staying alive long enough to produce offspring. Unable to move and at the mercy of their surroundings, they present a tempting source of nutrition for bacteria and animals alike. But they’re not helpless. Botanists have long known plants are capable of sensing their environments and responding to them. They can grow differently in response to shade or drought, or release noxious chemicals to fend off predators, even as a caterpillar is mid-way through chewing on a leaf. But how does that information travel? New research published in the journal Science shows a first glimpse, in real time, of distress signals traveling from one leaf, snipped, crushed, or chewed, to other healthy leaves in the same plant. The signal, a wave of calcium ions, seems linked to the amino acid glutamate, which in animals acts as a neurotransmitter. University of Wisconsin-Madison botany professor Simon Gilroy, a co-author on the new research, explains this chemical signaling pathway and other advances in how we understand plant communication.  At some science fairs, baking soda volcanos can grab the blue ribbon prize. But at the International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), a winning project is a design to kill cancer cells. ISEF is the grand championship of science fairs, where students from around the world submit their best research projects and compete in a high-stakes, hormone-filled challenge, which is showcased in full display in the new film, Science Fair. Like any high school experience, it can be a pressure cooker of anxiety, but also a time when many students find their calling—a crucible from which our future scientists are born. Ira talks with one of the film’s directors, Cristina Costantini, and catches up with a former ISEF participant Robbie Barrat, to discuss life after Science Fair. View a trailer of the film below and find screening times and locations here.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato, coming to you today from the studios of KUER, NPR, Utah, in Salt Lake City.

0:08.5

Later in the hour, inside the secret signals plants send from leaf to leaf when danger strikes.

0:15.4

But first, while Hurricane Florence is washing away homes and highways in the south. All that flooding not only devastates

0:22.4

property, takes lives, but it severely impacts agriculture, and I'm talking about the soil.

0:28.7

A 2011 report put out by Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts states, if we don't

0:35.9

take action, this rainfall pattern, quote, could cause

0:39.5

soil erosion in Wisconsin to double by 2050 from 1990 rates. So what is the impact of changing

0:47.7

climate on the soil? And what does this mean for the future of soil health? My next guest call

0:53.9

soil the underdog of natural resources,

0:57.0

and she's here to explain how we should be paying more attention to too much water.

1:02.0

Well, Andrea Bache is an agricultural scientist at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln.

1:08.0

Welcome to Science Friday.

1:09.0

Thanks for having me. So why do you call a

1:12.3

Soil the underdog natural resource? That's a great question, Ira. You know, I feel we give a lot

1:19.6

of attention to water pollution and air quality, but infrequently do you hear about the imperative of soil?

1:29.2

So I appreciate you and your team taking a segment to give us the opportunity to promote that.

1:34.7

But water and air seem to get a lot more attention than soil.

1:38.2

Yeah, well, we're going to talk about it now.

1:40.5

You know what's really interesting because when people talk about soil in the Midwest, in the West, they look at the 1930s dust bowl drought as a major cause of soil erosion in the plains of the Midwest.

1:51.5

But today, out of Nebraska, where you are, rain is too much rain is the problem.

1:58.9

Well, too much rain isn't always the problem. It can be sometimes too much of the

2:04.7

problem. So, you know, just to put some of the soil numbers that we're seeing, soil erosion

...

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