“…However, some empirical and experimental evidence has shown that application of Si could enhance the strength of the rice cell wall, consequently improving the lodging resistance of stems and yield (Dakora & Nelwamondo, ; Isa et al, ; Kashiwagi & Ishimaru, ; Liang et al, ; Ma, ; Ma & Takahashi, ; Ma & Yamaji, ; Savant, Snyder, & Datnoff, ) or mechanical strength of leaves (e.g., erectness; Epstein, ; Ma & Takahashi, ; Ma & Yamaji, ; Yoshida, Navasero, & Ramirez, ) of some crops (e.g., rice) in managed ecosystems. A possible role of leaf Si for protection against wind or wave stress was mentioned for emergent macrophytes (Schoelynck & Struyf, ) and tidal wetland plants (Sloey & Hester, ), but this link with wind has, to our knowledge, not been tested outside agricultural systems and certainly not in natural ecosystems on a large scale. Given that chronic wind stress can affect plant growth, morphology and physiology within the lifetime of a plant (Gardiner, Berry, & Moulia, ; Grace, ; Vogel, ) or on an evolutionary time‐scale (Niklas, ), we predict selection for high tissue [Si] associated with windy environments, that is, well above a minimum concentration needed for physiological function in the absence of wind.…”