Plants and Environment

The Earth's environment for plants consists of four natural spheres: the atmosphere, the hydrosphere, the lithosphere, and the soil, of which the soil is a semi-organic environment. At the interface of these four spheres, a living, the reproductive biosphere is constituted. The biosphere includes the troposphere (the lower layer of the atmosphere), the hydrosphere, the lithosphere, and the soil circle. Its extent corresponds to the magnitude of biological distribution, with an upper limit up to an altitude of ten kilometers above sea level and a lower limit up to a depth of twelve kilometers below sea level. The phytosphere (Earth's vegetation), on the other hand, is the core part of the biosphere.

Ecological Factors

Ecological FactorsEnvironmental factors that directly or indirectly influence the growth, development, reproduction, behavior, and distribution of organisms (plants) in the environment can be classified according to the nature of the factors.

  • Climatic factors. Such as light, temperature, moisture, air, lightning, etc.
  • Soil factors. Including soil structure, physical and chemical properties, and soil biology, etc.
  • Geographical factors. Such as altitude, slope direction, the ground's undulation, etc.
  • Biological factors. It refers to the animals, plants, microorganisms, and their communities that have interrelationships with plants.
  • Anthropogenic factors. Refers to the human activities that have an impact on plants.

In many cases, the above ecological factors can play a combined role in plants. When analyzing a specific phenomenon, we should also consider the integrality, non-equivalence, non-substitutability, and complementarity, as well as the limitation of the ecological factors.

Our Solution

Applications

  • The relationship between soil environment and plant growth and development
  • Soil environment regulation of plant growth
  • Light environment regulation of plant growth
  • Water environment regulation of plant growth
  • Temperature environment regulation of plant growth
  • Nutritional environment regulation of plant growth
  • Climate control of plant growth
  • Biological environmental regulation of plant growth

Our Responsibility

The plant-environment study is about the adaptation of individual plants to different environments, the influence of the environment on individual plants, the formation and development process of plant populations and communities in different environments, and the role of plants in the energy flow and material cycle of ecosystems. Lifeasible focuses on individual ecology, population ecology, and community ecology, etc. We use the plant-environment study solutions to elucidate the effects of external conditions on plant morphological structure, physiological activities, chemical composition, genetic characteristics, and geographic distribution, as well as the role of plants in adapting and modifying to environmental conditions. We aim to provide technical support for environmental protection, plant diversity conservation, and ecological development.

The services provided by Lifeasible cover all aspects of plant research, please contact us to find out how we can help you achieve the next research breakthrough.

Contact

*If your organization requires the signing of a confidentiality agreement, please contact us by email.

For research use only, not intended for any clinical use.

Related Solutions