New global study could help predict plant species responses to climate change

New global study could help predict plant species responses to climate change

A new global study which could help to predict plant species losses and responses to climate change and warming has been published.

Led by the University of Aberdeen in Scotland and Stockholm University in Sweden, ecologists and plant scientists explored heat and cold tolerances for more than 1,000 species of plants ranging from mosses and ferns to cacti and figs.

They found that plants retain an imprint of past exposure to cold and heat faced by their ancestors thousands or even millions of years ago – meaning that many plants could encounter difficulties with rapidly changing temperatures that are likely to be accelerated through climate change.

The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), revealed that plants’ heat and cold tolerances had much less to do with the temperatures they are currently exposed to than to their evolutionary ancestry and how they have migrated and dispersed in the past.

The ancient signatures in plant heat and cold tolerances were much more evident in “non-hardened” plants; that is, plants that had not had the time or opportunity to undergo their normal seasonal, preparatory changes in anticipation of challenging summer or winter temperatures.

Dr Lesley Lancaster, from the University of Aberdeen and lead author of the study, said: “If we get more extreme temperature changes, and these occur at unpredictable times of the year, non-hardened heat and cold tolerance will become increasingly exposed, and this will leave plants highly vulnerable, especially in parts of the world where plants have more recently colonized, and where temperatures are highly seasonal.

“Our findings show that in many parts of the world, changes in the timing of exposure might be more important than changes in absolute extreme temperatures themselves, because plants in their unhardened state were far less adapted to their local climate than were plants in their hardened state.”

For the study, the scientists created an extensive database of over 1700 individual measures of heat and cold tolerance for 1028 species of land plants. The list included plants like mosses, ferns, flowering plants and conifers, from all over the world.

“The database mainly included information on wild species from their natural habitats; some well-known ones ranging from heathers and blueberries, agaves and cacti, to figs, eucalypts, oaks and monkey puzzle trees, as well as hundreds of less well-known plants from all over the world, from Greenland to Panama, New Zealand and Antarctica”, said Dr Aelys Humphreys from Stockholm University and coauthor of the study.

“This sounds like a lot of information, and it is by far the largest dataset of this kind that has been analysed to date. But I was amazed, actually, to see that this means we have detailed information about the temperature tolerances for only a tiny fraction of all known plants worldwide, less than 1%,”

The new scientific findings contribute to understanding how and why plants – and their temperature tolerances – are distributed as they are, and will help predict plant species losses and responses to climate change and warming.

Dr Lancaster added: “We need to understand how resistant plants are to altered exposure to heat and cold, in order to understand biodiversity loss and to continue growing crops in changing climates.”

“For example, substantial losses to winegrowing areas have been predicted to result from even modest warming, and freezing damage to grain crops due to changing weather patterns is already a serious economic problem in many parts of the world.”

Search News

Browse by Month

2024

  1. Jan
  2. Feb
  3. Mar
  4. Apr
  5. May There are no items to show for May 2024
  6. Jun
  7. Jul
  8. Aug
  9. Sep
  10. Oct
  11. Nov There are no items to show for November 2024
  12. Dec There are no items to show for December 2024

2014

  1. Jan
  2. Feb
  3. Mar
  4. Apr
  5. May
  6. Jun
  7. Jul There are no items to show for July 2014
  8. Aug
  9. Sep There are no items to show for September 2014
  10. Oct There are no items to show for October 2014
  11. Nov
  12. Dec

2013

  1. Jan
  2. Feb
  3. Mar
  4. Apr There are no items to show for April 2013
  5. May
  6. Jun
  7. Jul There are no items to show for July 2013
  8. Aug
  9. Sep
  10. Oct
  11. Nov
  12. Dec There are no items to show for December 2013

2012

  1. Jan
  2. Feb
  3. Mar
  4. Apr
  5. May
  6. Jun There are no items to show for June 2012
  7. Jul There are no items to show for July 2012
  8. Aug There are no items to show for August 2012
  9. Sep
  10. Oct
  11. Nov
  12. Dec

2011

  1. Jan There are no items to show for January 2011
  2. Feb There are no items to show for February 2011
  3. Mar There are no items to show for March 2011
  4. Apr There are no items to show for April 2011
  5. May There are no items to show for May 2011
  6. Jun There are no items to show for June 2011
  7. Jul There are no items to show for July 2011
  8. Aug There are no items to show for August 2011
  9. Sep There are no items to show for September 2011
  10. Oct
  11. Nov There are no items to show for November 2011
  12. Dec There are no items to show for December 2011