Gilet Tristan, Bourouiba Lydia
*University of Liège, Microfluidics Lab - GRASP, Chemin des Chevreuils 1, Building B52, 4000 Liege, Belgium; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Building 48-333, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*University of Liège, Microfluidics Lab - GRASP, Chemin des Chevreuils 1, Building B52, 4000 Liege, Belgium; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Building 48-333, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Integr Comp Biol. 2014 Dec;54(6):974-84. doi: 10.1093/icb/icu116. Epub 2014 Oct 17.
Plant diseases are a major cause of losses of crops worldwide. Although rainfalls and foliar disease outbreaks are correlated, the detailed mechanism explaining their link remains poorly understood. The common assumption from phytopathology for such link is that a splash is generated upon impact of raindrops on contaminated liquid films coating sick leaves. We examine this assumption using direct high-speed visualizations of the interactions of raindrops and leaves over a range of plants. We show that films are seldom found on the surface of common leaves. We quantify the leaf-surface's wetting properties, showing that sessile droplets instead of films are predominant on the surfaces of leaves. We find that the presence of sessile drops rather than that of films has important implications when coupled with the compliance of a leaf: it leads to a new physical picture consisting of two dominant rain-induced mechanisms of ejection of pathogens. The first involves a direct interaction between the fluids of the raindrop and the sessile drops via an off-centered splash. The second involves the indirect action of the raindrop that leads to the inertial detachment of the sessile drop via the leaf's motion imparted by the impact of the raindrop. Both mechanisms are distinct from the commonly assumed scenario of splash-on-film in terms of outcome: they result in different fragmentation processes induced by surface tension, and, thus, different size-distributions of droplets ejected. This is the first time that modern direct high-speed visualizations of impacts on leaves are used to examine rain-induced ejection of pathogens at the level of a leaf and identify the inertial detachment and off-center splash ejections as alternatives to the classically assumed splash-on-film ejections of foliar pathogens.
植物病害是全球农作物损失的主要原因。尽管降雨与叶部病害爆发相关,但解释它们之间联系的详细机制仍知之甚少。植物病理学对于这种联系的普遍假设是,雨滴撞击覆盖病叶的受污染液膜时会产生飞溅。我们通过对一系列植物上雨滴与叶片相互作用的直接高速可视化来检验这一假设。我们发现普通叶片表面很少有液膜。我们量化了叶片表面的润湿性,表明叶片表面主要是静止的液滴而非液膜。我们发现,当与叶片的柔韧性相结合时,静止液滴的存在而非液膜的存在具有重要意义:它导致了一种新的物理图景,其中包括两种主要的由降雨引发的病原体弹射机制。第一种涉及雨滴流体与静止液滴之间通过偏心飞溅产生的直接相互作用。第二种涉及雨滴的间接作用,即通过雨滴撞击赋予叶片的运动导致静止液滴的惯性脱离。就结果而言,这两种机制都与通常假设的液膜上飞溅的情况不同:它们导致由表面张力引起的不同破碎过程,从而导致弹射液滴的不同尺寸分布。这是首次利用对叶片撞击的现代直接高速可视化技术,在叶片层面研究降雨引发的病原体弹射,并将惯性脱离和偏心飞溅弹射确定为叶部病原体经典假设的液膜上飞溅弹射的替代方式。