(Press-News.org) In one drop of water are found all the secrets of all the oceans.
---Kahlil Gibran
What do a pond or a lake and a carnivorous pitcher plant have in common?
The water-filled pool within a pitcher plant, it turns out, is a tiny ecosystem whose inner workings are similar to those of a full-scale water body.
Whether small carnivorous plant or huge lake, both are subject to the same ecological "tipping points," of concern on Earth Day--and every day, say scientists.
The findings are published in this week's issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
In the paper, ecologists affiliated with the National Science Foundation (NSF) Harvard Forest Long-Term Ecological Research site in Massachusetts offer new insights about how such tipping points happen.
"Human societies, financial markets and ecosystems all may shift abruptly and unpredictably from one, often favored, state to another less desirable one," says Saran Twombly, program director in NSF's Division of Environmental Biology, which funded the research.
"These researchers have looked at the minute ecosystems that thrive in pitcher plant leaves to determine early warning signals and to find ways of predicting and possibly forestalling such 'tipping points.'"
Life in lakes and ponds of all sizes can be disrupted when too many nutrients--such as in fertilizers and pollution--overload the system.
When that happens, these aquatic ecosystems can cross "tipping points" and change drastically. Excess nutrients cause algae to bloom. Bacteria eating the algae use up oxygen in the water. The result is a murky green lake.
"The first step to preventing tipping points is understanding what causes them," says Aaron Ellison, an ecologist at Harvard Forest and co-author of the paper. "For that, you need an experiment where you can demonstrate cause-and-effect."
Ellison and other scientists demonstrated how to reliably trigger a tipping point.
They continually added a set amount of organic matter--comparable to decomposing algae in a lake--to a small aquatic ecosystem: the tiny confines of a pitcher plant, a carnivorous plant native to eastern North America.
Each pitcher-shaped leaf holds about a quarter of an ounce of rainwater. Inside is a complex, multi-level food web of fly larvae and bacteria.
"The pitcher plant is its own little ecosystem," says Jennie Sirota, a researcher at North Dakota State University and lead author of the paper.
Similar to lake ecosystems, oxygen levels inside the water of a pitcher plant are controlled by photosynthesis and the behavior of resident organisms--in this case, mostly bacteria.
Ellison says that conducting an experiment with bacteria is like fast-forwarding through a video.
"A bacterial generation is 20 minutes, maybe an hour," he says. "In contrast, fish in a lake have generation times of a year or more.
"We would need to study a lake for 100 years to get the same information we can get from a pitcher plant in less than a week."
The same mathematical models, Ellison and colleagues discovered, can be used to describe a pitcher plant or a lake ecosystem.
To approximate an overload of nutrients in pitcher-plant water, the team fed set amounts of ground-up wasps to the plants.
"That's equivalent to a 200-pound person eating one or two McDonald's quarter-pounders every day for four days," says Ellison.
In pitcher plants with enough added wasps, an ecosystem tipping point reliably occurred about 45 hours after the start of feeding.
The scientists now have a way of creating tipping points. Their next step will be to identify the early warning signs.
"Tipping points may be easy to prevent," says Ellison, "if we know what to look for."
INFORMATION:
Other authors of the paper are Benjamin Baiser of Harvard Forest and Nicholas Gotelli of the University of Vermont.
-NSF-
Earth Day: Big ecosystem changes viewed through the lens of tiny carnivorous plants
Researchers use pitcher plants to identify signs of trouble dead ahead
2013-04-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New study shows children routinely injured or killed by guns
2013-04-24
AURORA, Colo. (April 23, 2013) – While gun control issues usually surface after major incidents like the fatal shooting of 20 elementary school students in Newtown, CT, a new study shows that children are routinely killed or injured by firearms.
The study, conducted by the Colorado School of Public Health, Denver Health and Children's Hospital Colorado, was published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). It examined trauma admissions at two emergency rooms in Denver and Aurora over nine years and found that 129 of 6,920 injured children suffered ...
AGU journal highlights -- 23 April 2013
2013-04-24
The following highlights summarize research papers that have been recently
published in Geophysical Research Letters (GRL), Journal of Geophysical
Research-Earth Surface (JGR-F), Journal of Geophysical Research-
Biogeosciences, (JGR-G) and Tectonics.
In this release:
1. Beachfront nourishment decisions: the "sucker-free rider" problem
2. Identifying the physical processes that control the stratigraphic record
3. Uplift of Zagros Mountains slows down convergence of two plates
4. Extensive Antarctic campaign finds cold bias in satellite records
5. Measuring tidal ...
Analysis of 2,000 years of climate records finds global cooling trend ended in the 19th century
2013-04-24
The most comprehensive evaluation of temperature change on Earth's continents over the past 1,000 to 2,000 years indicates that a long-term cooling trend--caused by factors including fluctuations in the amount and distribution of heat from the sun, and increases in volcanic activity--ended late in the 19th century.
The study also finds that the 20th century ranks as the warmest or nearly the warmest century on all of the continents, except Antarctica. Africa had insufficient data to be included in the analysis.
Global warming that has occurred since the end of the ...
Strengthening legumes to tackle fertilizer pollution
2013-04-24
LEMONT, Ill. – The overuse of nitrogen fertilizers in agriculture can wreak havoc on waterways, health and the environment.
An international team of scientists aims to lessen the reliance on these fertilizers by helping beans and similar plants boost their nitrogen production, even in areas with traditionally poor soil quality.
Researchers from the Center of Plant Genomics and Biotechnology at the Technical University of Madrid (UPM) and the Advanced Photon Source (APS) at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory report as an advance article April ...
Rare galaxy found furiously burning fuel for stars
2013-04-24
Astronomers have found a galaxy turning gas into stars with almost 100 percent efficiency, a rare phase of galaxy evolution that is the most extreme yet observed. The findings come from the IRAM Plateau de Bure interferometer in the French Alps, NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope.
"Galaxies burn gas like a car engine burns fuel. Most galaxies have fairly inefficient engines, meaning they form stars from their stellar fuel tanks far below the maximum theoretical rate," said Jim Geach of McGill University, lead author of a new study ...
ALS trial shows novel therapy is safe
2013-04-24
An investigational treatment for an inherited form of Lou Gehrig's disease has passed an early phase clinical trial for safety, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Massachusetts General Hospital report.
The researchers have shown that the therapy produced no serious side effects in patients with the disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The phase 1 trial's results, available online in Lancet Neurology, also demonstrate that the drug was successfully introduced into the central nervous system.
The treatment uses ...
People care about source of money, attach less value to 'tainted' wealth
2013-04-24
It's no accident that money obtained through dishonest or illegal means is called "dirty money." A new study from the University of California, Berkeley, suggests that when people perceive money as morally tainted, they also view it as having less value and purchasing power.
Challenging the belief that "all money is green," and that people will cross ethical boundaries to amass it, social scientists from UC Berkeley and Stanford University have found compelling evidence that the source of wealth really does matter. In fact, some people avoid ill-gotten gains – such as ...
High-energy astrophysics puzzle
2013-04-24
Pasadena, CA.— Blazars are the brightest of active galactic nuclei, and many emit very high-energy gamma rays. New observations of a blazar known as PKS 1424+240 show that it is the most-distant known source of very high-energy gamma rays. But its emission spectrum appears highly unusual.
A team including Carnegie's Michele Fumagalli used data from the Hubble Space Telescope to set a lower limit for the blazar's redshift (z ≥ 0.6035). An object's redshift value is a measurement of how much the wavelength of the light from it that reaches Earth is stretched by ...
Majority of children readmitted to hospital following stem cell transplant
2013-04-24
Nearly two-thirds of children receiving stem cell transplants returned to the hospital within six months for treatment of unexplained fevers, infections or other problems, according to a study performed at Dana-Farber/Children's Hospital Cancer Center in Boston. Children who received donor cells were twice as likely to be readmitted as children who received their own stem cells.
"No one had ever looked at these data in children," said Leslie E. Lehmann, MD, clinical director of pediatric stem cell transplantation at Dana-Farber/Children's Hospital Cancer Center (DF/CHCC). ...
Research at EB 2013 reports potential health benefits associated with mushroom consumption
2013-04-24
BOSTON — New research published as abstracts in The FASEB Journal and presented at Experimental Biology 2013 (EB 2013) ties mushrooms to potential health outcomes – demonstrating that mushrooms provide more to a dish than just flavor.
Nine mushroom research abstracts were presented at Experimental Biology this week, which found:
Weight Loss and Maintenance: A one-year, randomized clinical trial found that substituting white button mushrooms for red meat can be a useful strategy for enhancing and maintaining weight loss.1 (Lawrence Cheskin, M.D., F.A.C.P., Department ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
How satisfied are you with your mattress? New research survey aims to find out
Democracy first? Economic model begs to differ
Opening a new chapter in 3D microprinting with the dream material 'MXene'!
Temperature during development influences connectivity between neurons and behavior in fruit flies
Are you just tired or are you menopause tired?
Fluorescent dope
Meningococcal vaccine found to be safe and effective for infants in sub-Saharan Africa
Integrating stopping smoking support into talking therapies helps more people quit – new study
Breast cancer death rates will rise in elderly EU patients but fall for all other ages
Routine asthma test more reliable in the morning and has seasonal effects, say doctors
Yearly 18% rise in ADHD prescriptions in England since COVID-19 pandemic
Public health advice on safety of glycerol-containing slush ice drinks likely needs revising
Water aerobics for more than 10 weeks can trim waist size and aid weight loss
New study in the Lancet HIV highlights gaps in HPV-related cancer prevention for people living with HIV
Growth rates of broilers contribute to behavior differences, shed light on welfare impacts
Nature-inspired 3D-printing method shoots up faster than bamboo
Scientists create a type of catalog, the ‘colocatome,’ of non-cancerous cells’ influence on cancer
MSU researchers use unique approaches to study plants in future conditions
More than marks: How wellbeing shapes academic success
Study quantifies loss of disability-free years of life from COVID-19 pandemic
Butterflies choose mates because they are more attractive, not just easier to see
SwRI receives $3 million NASA astrobiology grant to study microbial life in Alaska’s arctic sand dunes
Inequality destroys the benefits of positive economic growth for the poor
HSS presents innovative research aimed at faster recovery after knee surgery at AAOS Annual Meeting
Advancing catalysis: Novel porous thin-film approach developed at TIFR Hyderabad enhances reaction efficiency
Small, faint and 'unexpected in a lot of different ways': U-M astronomers make galactic discovery
Study finds that supportive workplace culture advances implementation of lifestyle medicine in health systems
USPSTF statement on screening for food insecurity
‘Fishial’ recognition: Neural network identifies coral reef sounds
Cardiovascular health and biomarkers of neurodegenerative disease in older adults
[Press-News.org] Earth Day: Big ecosystem changes viewed through the lens of tiny carnivorous plantsResearchers use pitcher plants to identify signs of trouble dead ahead