… of the Year
Editorial
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41477-025-02203-6
… of the Year
Check for updates
December is a time when ‘… of the
Year’ pieces appear in all kinds of
publications. For this year only,
Nature Plants is joining the trend.
I
n the last month of the year, publications
traditionally try to identify a singular
thing, person, or event that has been of
particular prominence in the previous
11 months. These are different from annual
awards such as the Oscars, Grammys, or Royal
Society Science Book Prize (won this year by
Masud Husain’s Our Brains, Our Selves, a book
about neurology and the nature of self), as
they do not necessarily reward an outstanding
achievement but rather look for something
that can serve as a reflection of the year.
The best known, and where the idea originated, is the Time Person of the Year, which was
started in 1927 by the editors of Time magazine
to fill the slow news days between Christmas
and the start of the new year. The first recipient was Charles Lindbergh, who had made the
first solo non-stop transatlantic flight.
In 1989, Science attempted something similar, but rather than focus on a person they
decided to select a ‘Molecule of the Year’,
choosing DNA polymerase, which, given its
central role in the polymerase chain reaction
(PCR), is a molecule whose effect on science
(certainly on biology) would be difficult to
overestimate. However, Molecule of the Year
only lasted until 1996, when it was relaunched
as ‘Breakthrough of the Year’.
None of these yearly breakthroughs have
been directly related to plant research. Possibly the closest came in 2002, when RNA
interference (RNAi) by small RNAs was cited,
as some of the crucial studies in that area had
taken place in plants. However, last year, one of
the runners-up for the 2024 Breakthrough of
the Year was RNA pesticides, following the US
Environmental Protection Agency’s approval
of the insecticide Calantha for use against the
Colorado potato beetle. The spray delivers
small RNA molecules that specifically prevent
expression of a component of the beetle’s proteasome (PSMB5), causing the accumulation
of non-functional proteins and thus the death
of the beetles.
At the time of writing, the 2025 Breakthrough of the Year is yet to be announced;
nature plants
however, the ‘Word of the Year’ has been.
There are actually a number of different
words of the year as all of the major dictionaries like to name their own. Most of the words
chosen for 2025 have some relationship to
social media or artificial intelligence. Collins
English Dictionary has selected ‘vibe coding’,
which is the process of asking a large language
model (LLM) to write computer code for a specific application and then using the LLM to fix
bugs and further ‘improve’ the code so that the
final result has had no direct human involvement and no-one is quite sure what is actually
in the code or how it works. The Macquarie
Dictionary of Australian English has chosen
‘AI slop’: images, text or other forms of digital
content that have been lazily and quickly produced without depth or quality, something
we have thankfully not seen too much of at
Nature Plants so far.
The Cambridge Dictionary has opted for
‘parasocial’, a word relating to the phenomenon where people see famous individuals
or celebrities in the media so much that they
develop a personal relationship with them
and believe it to be reciprocated. And finally,
the Oxford English Dictionary has chosen
‘rage bait’: internet content the sole purpose
of which is to cause outrage in consumers in
order to increase online traffic, engagement
and ultimately, revenue — like ‘AIP slop’, not
something we are intentionally creating at
Nature Plants.
There are already quite a number of ‘Plants
of the Year’, but these are to do with horticulture rather than plant science and are more of
a prize. For example, the Royal Horticultural
Society named the Philadelphus variety Petite
Perfume Pink as its plant of 2025 back in May at
its annual Chelsea Flower Show, citing it as the
first truly pink-flowered Philadelphus.
If we can’t name a Plant of the Year, we wondered whether we could suggest a Nature
Plants Word of the Year: a word that represents a change or development in some field
of plant biology in 2025. Our best suggestion
is ‘ground-truthing’.
Ground-truthing is the practice of validating results and conclusions derived from
large-scale proxy data, often from remote
sensing, by direct measurements at representative locations. It isn’t a word that has
appeared much in what we have published.
In fact, it has appeared only once in our published corpus, in a paper published back in
2017 about the predicted effects of climate
change on coffee in Ethiopia 1. However,
ground-truthing has been turning up more
and more during peer review, with reviewers increasingly requesting — often strongly
requesting — the inclusion of field data that
validate the ecological relationships inferred
from remotely-sensed estimates of vegetation
parameters, especially those related to functional traits. Such data are generally obtained
from one of NASA’s satellite-mounted Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometers
(MODIS) or from the Tropospheric Monitoring
Instrument (TROPOMI).
This July, we published a study using
remotely-sensed sun-induced chlorophyll
fluorescence (SIF) data from TROPOMI to
look at photosynthesis on an ecosystem scale
and how it is related to tree species richness2.
The researchers validated their results with
near-infrared measurements from MODIS
and combined these with diversity data from
967 ground plots to show that species richness is positively correlated with ecosystem
photosynthesis.
A further example of ground-truthing came
in a paper we published in September identifying how trade-offs in leaf acclimation strategies feed-in to drivers of vegetation greening3.
The researchers used measures of leaf area
index and season length derived from MODIS
data products. They ground-truthed the negative correlations that emerged using data from
the USA National Phenology Network and the
Pan European and northern Eurasia Phenological databases, combining field measurements
on leaf mass area, specific leaf area and leaf dry
matter content.
We are not at a point where ground-truthing
is a requirement for the publication of studies
based on remotely-sensed proxy data; but the
rising frequency with which it is mentioned in
reviewer comments shows its importance is
becoming increasingly recognized.
Published online: 17 December 2025
References
1. Moat, J. et al. Nat. Plants 3, 17081 (2017).
2. Cao, R. et al. Nat. Plants 11, 1429–1440 (2025).
3. Wang, F. et al. Nat. Plants 11, 1748–1758 (2025).
Volume 11 | December 2025 | 2439 | 2439
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