Susan E Hartley
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Explore the profile of Susan E Hartley including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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32
Citations
549
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Recent Articles
1.
Johnson S, Waterman J, Hartley S, Cooke J, Ryalls J, Lagisz M, et al.
Ecol Lett
. 2024 Oct;
27(10):e14519.
PMID: 39400424
The performance of herbivorous animals depends on the nutritional and defensive traits of the plants they consume. The uptake and deposition of biogenic silicon in plant tissues is arguably the...
2.
Thorne S, Maathuis F, Hartley S
J Exp Bot
. 2023 Jun;
74(17):5363-5373.
PMID: 37314063
In response to herbivory, many grasses, including crops such as wheat, accumulate significant levels of silicon (Si) as an antiherbivore defence. Damage-induced increases in Si can be localized in damaged...
3.
Climatic Drivers of Silicon Accumulation in a Model Grass Operate in Low- but Not High-Silicon Soils
Johnson S, Vandegeer R, Borevitz J, Hartley S, Tissue D, Hall C
Plants (Basel)
. 2023 Mar;
12(5).
PMID: 36903856
Grasses are hyper-accumulators of silicon (Si), which is known to alleviate diverse environmental stresses, prompting speculation that Si accumulation evolved in response to unfavourable climatic conditions, including seasonally arid environments....
4.
Wiethase J, Critchlow R, Foley C, Foley L, Kinsey E, Bergman B, et al.
Sci Rep
. 2023 Feb;
13(1):2417.
PMID: 36813819
Semiarid rangelands are identified as at high risk of degradation due to anthropogenic pressure and climate change. Through tracking timelines of degradation we aimed to identify whether degradation results from...
5.
Johnson S, Cibils-Stewart X, Waterman J, Biru F, Rowe R, Hartley S
Proc Biol Sci
. 2022 Feb;
289(1969):20212536.
PMID: 35168395
Predicting how plants allocate to different anti-herbivore defences in response to elevated carbon dioxide (CO) concentrations is important for understanding future patterns of crop susceptibility to herbivory. Theories of defence...
6.
Thorne S, Stirnberg P, Hartley S, Maathuis F
Rice (N Y)
. 2022 Feb;
15(1):8.
PMID: 35112196
Silicon (Si) fertiliser can improve rice (Oryza sativa) tolerance to salinity. The rate of Si uptake and its associated benefits are known to differ between plant genotypes, but, to date,...
7.
Frew A, Antunes P, Cameron D, Hartley S, Johnson S, Rillig M, et al.
New Phytol
. 2021 Oct;
233(3):1022-1031.
PMID: 34618922
No abstract available.
8.
Waterman J, Cibils-Stewart X, Cazzonelli C, Hartley S, Johnson S
Ecology
. 2021 Jun;
102(9):e03438.
PMID: 34139023
Silicon (Si) can adversely affect insect herbivores, particularly in plants that evolved the ability to accumulate large quantities of Si. Very rapid herbivore-induced accumulation of Si has recently been demonstrated,...
9.
Thorne S, Hartley S, Maathuis F
Plants (Basel)
. 2021 Apr;
10(4).
PMID: 33924159
Drought stress reduces annual global wheat yields by 20%. Silicon (Si) fertilisation has been proposed to improve plant drought stress tolerance. However, it is currently unknown if and how Si...
10.
Johnson S, Hartley S, Ryalls J, Frew A, Hall C
Ecology
. 2020 Nov;
102(3):e03250.
PMID: 33219513
Plants deploy an arsenal of chemical and physical defenses against arthropod herbivores, but it may be most cost efficient to produce these only when attacked. Herbivory activates complex signaling pathways...