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Spraying rice with zinc oxide nanoparticles protects yields during heat waves, study finds

Applying zinc oxide nanoparticles to rice plant leaves maintains yields during heat waves
Schematic showing the accumulation and translocation of ZnO NPs on the leaf surface and within rice leaves, as well as the phyllosphere multifunctionality of ZnO NPs under HW conditions. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2414822121

A small team of horticulturists in China and the U.S. has found that spraying rice plants with a zinc oxide nanoparticle solution helps them better handle the stress of a heat wave. In their study, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the group conducted experiments involving spraying rice plants in a heated greenhouse.

Prior research has shown that can reduce or kill plants altogether, depending on the severity of the heat wave. Because of that, plant scientists have been looking for ways to help plants survive the likely increase in number and severity of heat waves expected due to . The research team found that zinc oxide nanoparticles may be one such tool.

Prior research has also shown that zinc oxide is a natural part of plant metabolism—rice farmers have used it as a form of fertilizer for many years. More recently, researchers have found that applying zinc nanoparticles is a much more efficient approach—it allows the particles to pass through the pores in leaves. The team wondered if zinc oxide might also help rice plants maintain their yields during heat waves.

To find out, the researchers planted rice in a climate-controlled greenhouse. Once the plants were grown, the team raised the temperature to 37°C for six consecutive days. During the induced heat wave, they sprayed some of the plants with a zinc oxide nanoparticle solution, while the other plants were only watered.

Upon harvesting the rice, the research team found that those plants that had been sprayed with zinc oxide nanoparticles had yields that were 22.1% greater than the plants that had been sprayed with water alone. In taking a closer look at the rice grains, the research team also found that they contained more nutrients, as well.

In conducting another similar experiment, the researchers found that spraying with nanoparticles also led to increased yields compared to those not sprayed even when there was no heat wave.

More information: Shuqing Guo et al, Zinc oxide nanoparticles cooperate with the phyllosphere to promote grain yield and nutritional quality of rice under heatwave stress, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024).

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Citation: Spraying rice with zinc oxide nanoparticles protects yields during heat waves, study finds (2024, November 5) retrieved 15 June 2025 from /news/2024-11-spraying-rice-zinc-oxide-nanoparticles.html
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