Scientists create tool to watch plants breathe in real time

Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have developed a new system called Stomata In-Sight that allows scientists to observe plant stomata movements while measuring gas exchange under controlled conditions. This breakthrough, published in Plant Physiology, could lead to crops that use water more efficiently and resist drought better. The tool combines advanced imaging and environmental controls to provide real-time insights into plant physiology.

Plants absorb carbon dioxide through tiny leaf pores known as stomata for photosynthesis, but this process also results in water loss. Balancing this tradeoff is crucial for agriculture, especially amid growing drought challenges. Until recently, scientists struggled to monitor stomata behavior and gas exchange simultaneously in living plants.

The new Stomata In-Sight system addresses this gap. Developed by a team at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign's Department of Plant Biology and Institute for Genomic Biology, it integrates three key technologies. Live confocal microscopy provides sharp, three-dimensional images of stomata without damaging tissue. Sensitive instruments measure carbon dioxide uptake and water vapor release precisely. A specialized chamber controls light, temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide levels to mimic real-world conditions.

As one researcher noted, "Traditionally, we've had to choose between seeing the stomata or measuring their function." Previous methods, like leaf impressions, captured only static snapshots, while standard microscopes lacked environmental control. Stomata respond rapidly to changes in their surroundings, making dynamic observation essential.

This innovation enables direct study of how stomata open and close in response to environmental cues, revealing links between stomatal density and water-use efficiency. Such insights could guide breeding of crops that produce more food, biofuel, and bioproducts with less water, addressing water scarcity as the primary limit on farming.

The study, titled "Stomata In-Sight: Integrating Live Confocal Microscopy with Leaf Gas Exchange and Environmental Control," appeared in Plant Physiology in 2025 (volume 199, issue 4). It was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy's Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation, the National Science Foundation, and a philanthropic gift. The team includes Joseph D. Crawford, Dustin Mayfield-Jones, Glenn A. Fried, Nicolas Hernandez, and Andrew D.B. Leakey.

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