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Dive into the research topics where Carlos A. Mazza is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos A. Mazza.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Canopy Light and Plant Health

Carlos L. Ballaré; Carlos A. Mazza; Amy T. Austin; Ronald Pierik

During the course of this century, increasing human population and economic development will continue to put pressure on agricultural systems for increased crop yields ([Rosegrant and Cline, 2003][1]; [Foley et al., 2005][2]). Grains produced for livestock feed and biofuels are now competing for


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences | 2010

A look into the invisible: ultraviolet-B sensitivity in an insect (Caliothrips phaseoli) revealed through a behavioural action spectrum.

Carlos A. Mazza; Miriam M. Izaguirre; Javier Curiale; Carlos L. Ballaré

Caliothrips phaseoli, a phytophagous insect, detects and responds to solar ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B; λ ≤ 315 nm) under field conditions. A highly specific mechanism must be present in the thrips visual system in order to detect this narrow band of solar radiation, which is at least 30 times less abundant than the UV-A (315–400 nm), to which many insects are sensitive. We constructed an action spectrum of thrips responses to light by studying their behavioural reactions to monochromatic irradiation under confinement conditions. Thrips were maximally sensitive to wavelengths between 290 and 330 nm; human-visible wavelengths (λ ≥ 400 nm) failed to elicit any response. All but six ommatidia of the thrips compound eye were highly fluorescent when exposed to UV-A of wavelengths longer than 330 nm. We hypothesized that the fluorescent compound acts as an internal filter, preventing radiation with λ > 330 nm from reaching the photoreceptor cells. Calculations based on the putative filter transmittance and a visual pigment template of λmax = 360 nm produced a sensitivity spectrum that was strikingly similar to the action spectrum of UV-induced behavioural response. These results suggest that specific UV-B vision in thrips is achieved by a standard UV-A photoreceptor and a sharp cut-off internal filter that blocks longer UV wavelengths in the majority of the ommatidia.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2015

Soybean resistance to stink bugs (Nezara viridula and Piezodorus guildinii) increases with exposure to solar UV‐B radiation and correlates with isoflavonoid content in pods under field conditions

Jorge A. Zavala; Carlos A. Mazza; Francisco M. Dillon; Hugo D. Chludil; Carlos L. Ballaré

Solar UV-B radiation (280-315 nm) has a significant influence on trophic relationships in natural and managed ecosystems, affecting plant-insect interactions. We explored the effects of ambient UV-B radiation on the levels of herbivory by stink bugs (Nezara viridula and Piezodorus guildinii) in field-grown soybean crops. The experiments included two levels of UV-B radiation (ambient and attenuated UV-B) and four soybean cultivars known to differ in their content of soluble leaf phenolics. Ambient UV-B radiation increased the accumulation of the isoflavonoids daidzin and genistin in the pods of all cultivars. Soybean crops grown under attenuated UV-B had higher numbers of unfilled pods and damaged seeds than crops grown under ambient UV-B radiation. Binary choice experiments with soybean branches demonstrated that stink bugs preferred branches of the attenuated UV-B treatment. We found a positive correlation between percentage of undamaged seeds and the contents of daidzin and genistin in pods. Our results suggest that constitutive and UV-B-induced isoflavonoids increase plant resistance to stink bugs under field conditions.


New Phytologist | 2015

Photoreceptors UVR8 and phytochrome B cooperate to optimize plant growth and defense in patchy canopies

Carlos A. Mazza; Carlos L. Ballaré

Fil: Mazza, Carlos Alberto. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas. Oficina de Coordinacion Administrativa Parque Centenario. Instituto de Investigaciones Fisiologicas y Ecologicas Vinculadas a la Agricultura; Argentina


Oecologia | 2013

No time for candy: passionfruit (Passiflora edulis) plants down-regulate damage-induced extra floral nectar production in response to light signals of competition

Miriam M. Izaguirre; Carlos A. Mazza; María S. Astigueta; Ana M. Ciarla; Carlos L. Ballaré

Plant fitness is often defined by the combined effects of herbivory and competition, and plants must strike a delicate balance between their ability to capture limiting resources and defend against herbivore attack. Many plants use indirect defenses, such as volatile compounds and extrafloral nectaries (EFN), to attract canopy arthropods that are natural enemies of herbivorous organisms. While recent evidence suggests that upon perception of low red to far-red (R:FR) ratios, which signal the proximity of competitors, plants down-regulate resource allocation to direct chemical defenses, it is unknown if a similar phytochrome-mediated response occurs for indirect defenses. We evaluated the interactive effects of R:FR ratio and simulated herbivory on nectar production by EFNs of passionfruit (Passiflora edulis f. flavicarpa). The activity of petiolar EFNs dramatically increased in response to simulated herbivory and hormonal treatment with methyl jasmonate (MeJA). Low R:FR ratios, which induced a classic “shade-avoidance” repertoire of increased stem elongation in P. edulis, strongly suppressed the EFN response triggered by simulated herbivory or MeJA application. Strikingly, the EFN response to wounding and light quality was localized to the branches that received the treatments. In vines like P. edulis, a local response would allow the plants to precisely adjust their light harvesting and defense phenotypes to the local conditions encountered by individual branches when foraging for resources in patchy canopies. Consistent with the emerging paradigm that phytochrome regulation of jasmonate signaling is a central modulator of adaptive phenotypic plasticity, our results demonstrate that light quality is a strong regulator of indirect defenses.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2013

Beneficial effects of solar UV‐B radiation on soybean yield mediated by reduced insect herbivory under field conditions

Carlos A. Mazza; Patricia I. Giménez; Adriana G. Kantolic; Carlos L. Ballaré

Ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B: 280-315 nm) has damaging effects on cellular components and macromolecules. In plants, natural levels of UV-B can reduce leaf area expansion and growth, which can lead to reduced productivity and yield. UV-B can also have important effects on herbivorous insects. Owing to the successful implementation of the Montreal Protocol, current models predict that clear-sky levels of UV-B radiation will decline during this century in response to ozone recovery. However, because of climate change and changes in land use practices, future trends in UV doses are difficult to predict. In the experiments reported here, we used an exclusion approach to study the effects of solar UV-B radiation on soybean crops, which are extensively grown in many areas of the world that may be affected by future variations in UV-B radiation. In a first experiment, performed under normal management practices (which included chemical pest control), we found that natural levels of UV-B radiation reduced soybean yield. In a second experiment, where no pesticides were applied, we found that solar UV-B significantly reduced insect herbivory and, surprisingly, caused a concomitant increase in crop yield. Our data support the idea that UV-B effects on agroecosystems are the result of complex interactions involving multiple trophic levels. A better understanding of the mechanisms that mediate the anti-herbivore effect of UV-B radiation may be used to design crop varieties with improved adaptation to the cropping systems that are likely to prevail in the coming decades in response to agricultural intensification.


Plant Physiology | 2000

Functional Significance and Induction by Solar Radiation of Ultraviolet-Absorbing Sunscreens in Field-Grown Soybean Crops

Carlos A. Mazza; Hernán E. Boccalandro; Carla Valeria Giordano; Daniela Battista; Ana L. Scopel; Carlos L. Ballaré


Plant Cell and Environment | 1999

The effects of solar ultraviolet-B radiation on the growth and yield of barley are accompanied by increased DNA damage and antioxidant responses

Carlos A. Mazza; D. Battista; A. M. Zima; M. Szwarcberg-Bracchitta; C. V. Giordano; A. Acevedo; Ana L. Scopel; Carlos L. Ballaré


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Remote sensing of future competitors: impacts on plant defenses.

Miriam M. Izaguirre; Carlos A. Mazza; Mariela Biondini; Ian T. Baldwin; Carlos L. Ballaré


Annals of Botany | 2007

Solar ultraviolet-B radiation and insect herbivory trigger partially overlapping phenolic responses in Nicotiana attenuata and Nicotiana longiflora

Miriam M. Izaguirre; Carlos A. Mazza; Aleš Svatoš; Ian T. Baldwin; Carlos L. Ballaré

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Ana L. Scopel

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Jorge A. Zavala

University of Buenos Aires

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Carla Valeria Giordano

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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A. M. Zima

University of Buenos Aires

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Amy T. Austin

University of Buenos Aires

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Ana M. Ciarla

University of Buenos Aires

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