Fuente: UCSD Research News
  Expuesto el: miércoles, 02 de mayo de 2012 22:21
  Autor: UCSD Research News
  Asunto: Study Shows Experiments Underestimate Plant Responses to Climate  Change
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 This spring’s warmer    temperatures produced an earlier than normal bloom for cherry blossoms in    DC’s tidal basin. Credit: Elizabeth Wolkovich Experiments may    dramatically underestimate how plants will respond to climate change in the    future. That’s the conclusion of an analysis of 50 plant studies on four    continents, published this week in an advance online issue of the journal Nature, which found    that shifts in the timing of flowering and leafing in plants due to global    warming appear to be much greater than estimated by warming experiments. 
 Scientists use a variety    of methods to simulate warmer temperatures predicted in the future. Credit:    Daren Eiri “This suggests that    predicted ecosystem changes—including continuing advances in the start of    spring across much of the globe—may be far greater than current estimates    based on data from experiments,” said Elizabeth Wolkovich, an ecologist at    the University of British Columbia who led an interdisciplinary team of    scientists that conducted the study while she was a postdoctoral fellow at    the University of California, San Diego. “These findings have    extensive consequences for predictions of species diversity, ecosystem    services and global models of future change,” said Elsa Cleland, an assistant    professor of biology at UC San Diego and senior author of the study, which    involved 22 institutions in Canada, Sweden, Switzerland, the U.K. and the    U.S.  “Long-term records appear to be converging on a consistent average    response to climate change, but future plant and ecosystem responses to    warming may be much higher than previously estimated from experimental data.” 
 
 Open top warming chamber    in the White Mountains of California. Credit: Christopher Kopp 
 
 Wolkovich and her    colleagues found that experiments underpredicted plant phenological responses    to temperature by at least fourfold compared to long-term records. Long-term    historical records consistently showed that leafing and flowering will    advance, on average, 5 to 6 days per degree Celsius—a finding that was    strikingly consistent across species and datasets. 
 Rabbitbrush flowers in    the White Mountains of California. Credit: Christopher Kopp “These results are    important because we rely heavily on these experiments to predict what will    happen to communities and ecosystems in the future,” said Ben Cook, a    climatologist at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia    University, who helped bring together the research team. Wolkovich said a number    of factors could explain this discrepancy—including additional effects of    climate change not mirrored by warming experiments, or specific aspects of    the experimental design such as the degree of warming. But her team’s analyses    found that within the range of temperature increases considered, responses    were not noticeably affected by the degree of warming or the number of years    the study spanned. Instead, the discrepancy may be driven by exactly how    researchers manipulate temperatures and how accurately they measure them. “Researchers use a    variety of methods to increase temperatures in the field—including heating    cables in the soil, small greenhouse-like structures and heating above    plants,” explains Wolkovich. “We found that plant sensitivities to    temperature vary with the design of the experiment, with above plant warming    producing consistent advances in flowering.” Additionally, because the    comparison was based on a metric that considered plant responses per degree    Celsius of temperature change, experiments that overestimate their    temperature increases could underestimate the change in leafing and flowering    per degree of warming. The difference in estimated responses from experiments    versus long-term records has important consequences for predictions of    species diversity, ecosystem services and global models of future change. “Continuing efforts to    improve the design of warming experiments while maintaining and extending    long-term historical monitoring will be critical to pinpointing the cause of    the mismatch,” said Wolkovich. “These efforts will yield a more accurate    picture of future plant communities and ecosystems with continuing climate    change.” The study was funded by    the National Science Foundation, the State of California and the University    of California, Santa Barbara. 
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