The tea plant, Camellia sinensis (L.) Kuntze, is used to produce one of the most consumed beverages worldwide while serving as an important cash crop for supporting rural development, poverty alleviation, and food security in many developing countries. However, climate change is posing new and heightened threats to the tea plant and its ecosystem with notable implications for tea producers and consumers. Tea is regarded as an ideal model perennial plant for understanding the effects of climate change on terrestrial plants due to its wide distribution, stable ecosystem, health attributes, and economic longevity. The nutraceutical value and health attributes of tea are closely related to the large amounts of three major secondary metabolite classes including polyphenols (including catechins, theaflavins, tannins, and flavonoids), amino acids (e.g. theanine) and alkaloids (e.g. caffeine), which collectively account for 35-50% of tea on a dry weight basis. As in most plants, the secondary metabolites of tea are extremely sensitive to environmental variations including shifts in temperature, rainfall, CO2, solar irradiation, and humidity and thereby might serve as sensitive indicators of climate change. A long lifespan of over 150 years also allows tea plants to respond to climate change through various morpho-anatomical, physiological, and genetic adaptations.
In the past decade, a number of studies examined the effects of elevated CO2, increasing temperature, and rainfall on tea systems, and how low carbon technologies can help mitigate and adapt to climate change. However, science, practice, and policy still lags behind to efficiently manage climate change effects towards a sustainable tea industry. Research is called for to further explore the basic mechanisms responsible for tea plant growth, development, and quality as well as its ecosystem stability in the context of climate change. In addition, transdisciplinary research is called for to understand the implications of climate change on the social and economic aspects of the tea system from production through consumption.
This Research Topic is devoted, but not limited, to recent scientific progress on following areas:
1. Morpho-anatomical, physiological, biochemical and molecular level studies in the context of shifts in one or more climate change factors (including shifts in CO2, seasonality, temperature, water stress, light conditions).
2. Effect of environmental factors on targeted secondary metabolites that confer tea quality.
3. Studies aimed at elucidating the effect of herbivory and plant-pathogen interactions in tea plants.
4. Breeding of climate resilient tea cultivars to efficiently respond to single or multiple environmental factors.
5. Farm-level studies evaluating the effectiveness of different mitigation and adaptation strategies to manage for climate risk.
6. Transdisciplinary studies addressing sustainability aspects of tea systems based on environmental, economic, and social factors.
7. Development of evidence-based strategies and policies that reduce vulnerability of tea plant and its ecosystems to climate change towards supporting sustainability.
Note for authors: Studies falling into the categories below will not be considered for review unless they are expanded and provide further insights into the biological system or process being studied:
- Descriptive collections of transcripts, proteins or metabolites, including comparative sets as a result of different conditions or treatments.
- Descriptive studies that define gene families using basic phylogenetics and the assignment of cursory functional attributions (e.g. expression profiles, hormone or metabolites levels, promoter analysis, informatic parameters).
- Manuscripts on QTL mapping, by any method, require a dense marker coverage (tentatively N > 100 depending on the population size). Deviations from these requirements should be well-justified and explained in the cover letter.
- Manuscripts on genomic selection (GWAS) generally require relatively big sample sizes (tentatively N > 200) and precise information about the structure of the population due to relatedness and/or ancestral structure. Deviations from these requirements should be well-justified and explained in the cover letter.
- Phenotyping of complex quantitative traits must be conducted in at least 3 independent test environments, which can be the result of any combination of year/season with location (field, location, greenhouse, and/or growth chamber), and each test environment should consist of at least 3 replicates. Deviations from these requirements should be well-justified and explained in the cover letter.
The tea plant, Camellia sinensis (L.) Kuntze, is used to produce one of the most consumed beverages worldwide while serving as an important cash crop for supporting rural development, poverty alleviation, and food security in many developing countries. However, climate change is posing new and heightened threats to the tea plant and its ecosystem with notable implications for tea producers and consumers. Tea is regarded as an ideal model perennial plant for understanding the effects of climate change on terrestrial plants due to its wide distribution, stable ecosystem, health attributes, and economic longevity. The nutraceutical value and health attributes of tea are closely related to the large amounts of three major secondary metabolite classes including polyphenols (including catechins, theaflavins, tannins, and flavonoids), amino acids (e.g. theanine) and alkaloids (e.g. caffeine), which collectively account for 35-50% of tea on a dry weight basis. As in most plants, the secondary metabolites of tea are extremely sensitive to environmental variations including shifts in temperature, rainfall, CO2, solar irradiation, and humidity and thereby might serve as sensitive indicators of climate change. A long lifespan of over 150 years also allows tea plants to respond to climate change through various morpho-anatomical, physiological, and genetic adaptations.
In the past decade, a number of studies examined the effects of elevated CO2, increasing temperature, and rainfall on tea systems, and how low carbon technologies can help mitigate and adapt to climate change. However, science, practice, and policy still lags behind to efficiently manage climate change effects towards a sustainable tea industry. Research is called for to further explore the basic mechanisms responsible for tea plant growth, development, and quality as well as its ecosystem stability in the context of climate change. In addition, transdisciplinary research is called for to understand the implications of climate change on the social and economic aspects of the tea system from production through consumption.
This Research Topic is devoted, but not limited, to recent scientific progress on following areas:
1. Morpho-anatomical, physiological, biochemical and molecular level studies in the context of shifts in one or more climate change factors (including shifts in CO2, seasonality, temperature, water stress, light conditions).
2. Effect of environmental factors on targeted secondary metabolites that confer tea quality.
3. Studies aimed at elucidating the effect of herbivory and plant-pathogen interactions in tea plants.
4. Breeding of climate resilient tea cultivars to efficiently respond to single or multiple environmental factors.
5. Farm-level studies evaluating the effectiveness of different mitigation and adaptation strategies to manage for climate risk.
6. Transdisciplinary studies addressing sustainability aspects of tea systems based on environmental, economic, and social factors.
7. Development of evidence-based strategies and policies that reduce vulnerability of tea plant and its ecosystems to climate change towards supporting sustainability.
Note for authors: Studies falling into the categories below will not be considered for review unless they are expanded and provide further insights into the biological system or process being studied:
- Descriptive collections of transcripts, proteins or metabolites, including comparative sets as a result of different conditions or treatments.
- Descriptive studies that define gene families using basic phylogenetics and the assignment of cursory functional attributions (e.g. expression profiles, hormone or metabolites levels, promoter analysis, informatic parameters).
- Manuscripts on QTL mapping, by any method, require a dense marker coverage (tentatively N > 100 depending on the population size). Deviations from these requirements should be well-justified and explained in the cover letter.
- Manuscripts on genomic selection (GWAS) generally require relatively big sample sizes (tentatively N > 200) and precise information about the structure of the population due to relatedness and/or ancestral structure. Deviations from these requirements should be well-justified and explained in the cover letter.
- Phenotyping of complex quantitative traits must be conducted in at least 3 independent test environments, which can be the result of any combination of year/season with location (field, location, greenhouse, and/or growth chamber), and each test environment should consist of at least 3 replicates. Deviations from these requirements should be well-justified and explained in the cover letter.