Skip to main content

In defense of funding foundational plant science.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Friesner, JD; Argueso, CT; Busch, W; Hamann, T; Strader, L; Williams, M; Wu, S; Roeder, AHK
Published in: The Plant cell
May 2025

Plants are essential for life as we know it on Earth. They oxygenate the atmosphere, regulate the climate, and comprise much of the primary producers underpinning complex food systems. In the 1980s, a multinational group of plant scientists chose the small angiosperm-Arabidopsis thaliana-to serve as the model flowering plant for genetic and molecular studies that would be leveraged to produce vast new datasets, resources, and tools. The rationale they used to persuade funding agencies to make significant investments and focus intense effort on this single plant species was to produce a deep fundamental knowledge of the biology of plants and to apply this knowledge to valuable, but typically less tractable, plant species. Over the past 40 yr, Arabidopsis has emerged as the most powerful and versatile plant model to uncover core biological principles and served as a prototyping system to test advanced molecular and genetic concepts. We argue that the emerging challenges of accelerating climate instability and a rapidly growing global population call for renewed and robust investments in fundamental plant biology research. Leveraging the power of Arabidopsis research, resources, datasets, and global collaborative community is more important than ever. This commentary lays out a vigorous defense of foundational, i.e. "basic," plant science research; describes that often, Arabidopsis is preferable to working directly in crops; highlights several transformative applications generated from basic plant research; and makes the argument that plant science is vital to the survival of humanity.

Duke Scholars

Published In

The Plant cell

DOI

EISSN

1532-298X

ISSN

1040-4651

Publication Date

May 2025

Volume

37

Issue

5

Start / End Page

koaf106

Related Subject Headings

  • Plant Biology & Botany
  • Arabidopsis
  • 3108 Plant biology
  • 0607 Plant Biology
  • 0604 Genetics
  • 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Friesner, J. D., Argueso, C. T., Busch, W., Hamann, T., Strader, L., Williams, M., … Roeder, A. H. K. (2025). In defense of funding foundational plant science. The Plant Cell, 37(5), koaf106. https://doi.org/10.1093/plcell/koaf106
Friesner, Joanna D., Cristiana T. Argueso, Wolfgang Busch, Thorsten Hamann, Lucia Strader, Mary Williams, Shuang Wu, and Adrienne H. K. Roeder. “In defense of funding foundational plant science.The Plant Cell 37, no. 5 (May 2025): koaf106. https://doi.org/10.1093/plcell/koaf106.
Friesner JD, Argueso CT, Busch W, Hamann T, Strader L, Williams M, et al. In defense of funding foundational plant science. The Plant cell. 2025 May;37(5):koaf106.
Friesner, Joanna D., et al. “In defense of funding foundational plant science.The Plant Cell, vol. 37, no. 5, May 2025, p. koaf106. Epmc, doi:10.1093/plcell/koaf106.
Friesner JD, Argueso CT, Busch W, Hamann T, Strader L, Williams M, Wu S, Roeder AHK. In defense of funding foundational plant science. The Plant cell. 2025 May;37(5):koaf106.

Published In

The Plant cell

DOI

EISSN

1532-298X

ISSN

1040-4651

Publication Date

May 2025

Volume

37

Issue

5

Start / End Page

koaf106

Related Subject Headings

  • Plant Biology & Botany
  • Arabidopsis
  • 3108 Plant biology
  • 0607 Plant Biology
  • 0604 Genetics
  • 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology