(Press-News.org) DURHAM, N.C. -- The timing of the first leaves on trees and plants can make or break an agricultural season. Too early, and the leaves might be blasted by the last frost. Too late and they miss out on maximizing the growing season.
But as climate change brings warmer-than-usual winters to the U.S., the plants may be more vulnerable to imprecise timing, and the tools traditionally used by farmers and horticulturists to predict the season may be inadequate.
"How do we do a better job of seeing the climate the way the plants see it?" asks James Clark, the Blomquist Professor of environment and biology at Duke University. With colleagues from the Marine Biological Lab at Woods Hole and the University of Georgia, Clark is working on building a statistical model of how trees make this decision.
The first takeaway from that work, now appearing online in the journal Global Change Biology, is that "there is a certain time of the year when warming has the most impact," Clark said. And that time would appear to be from mid-February to mid-March, a few weeks before the buds would be expected to open.
Unseasonal warming during that late-winter/early-spring period has more effect on the plant's timing than at any other time of the year, Clark said.
Farmers and horticulturists have long relied on the concept of degree days to have a ballpark sense of when the leaves will arrive and where it is safe to plant crops and ornamentals. Degree days are a measure of how many degrees above or below a mean the temperature has been over a period of time.
"The degree-day model makes most sense when the climate isn't changing," Clark said. But this new model is showing that it may become unreliable as temperatures depart from historical norms.
Data for the study comes from an experiment the researchers are running in the Duke Forest in North Carolina and in the Harvard Forest in Petersham, Mass. A mix of native trees are living in open-topped, temperature-controlled chambers in natural forests. Some plots are unheated, others are heated to 3 degrees Celsius or 5 degrees Celsius higher than the ambient temperature.
In the case of the Duke plot, that meant that the +5C chamber experienced no below-freezing temperatures in the unusually mild winter of 2012, Clark said.
It was thought that the trees were "programmed to experience a certain amount of chilling and then warming," Clark said. But in this case, they wouldn't have met their usual requirement for chilling before experiencing the warming that signals it's time for spring. Yet they still budded very early. "The dormant season is more complex than we thought," Clark said.
Some species are more sensitive to an unusually warm winter than others, Clark said. Some will advance their budding to match the earlier season, while others cannot. "As the climate changes, can we see differences in how species track change through time?" Clark asks. "Averages don't work anymore because the plants aren't seeing the average."
INFORMATION:
Funding for this study and the heated forest experiments comes from the U.S. Department of Energy.
CITATION: "The seasonal timing of warming that controls onset of the growing season," James S. Clark, Jerry Melillo, Jacqueline Mohan, Carl Salk. Global Change Biology, online Oct. 1, 2013. DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12420
Early spring warming has greatest effect on breaking bud
Horticulture's zone maps may become unreliable as climate changes
2013-10-02
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Douglas Institute researchers identify the neural circuits that modulate REM sleep
2013-10-02
A team of scientists led by Dr. Antoine Adamantidis, a researcher at the Douglas Mental Health University Institute and an assistant professor at McGill University, has released the findings from their latest study, which will appear in the October issue of the prestigious scientific journal Nature Neuroscience.(1)
Previous studies had established an association between the activity of certain types of neurons and the phase of sleep known as REM (rapid eye movement). Researchers on the team of Dr. Antoine Adamantidis identified, for the first time, a precise causal link ...
Rice U study: Technology, not uninsured patients, driving hospital costs
2013-10-02
Technology, not uninsured patients, likely explains the steep rise in the cost of hospital care in Texas in recent years, according to Vivian Ho, the chair in health economics at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, a professor of economics at Rice and a professor of medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. Her findings were reported in an article appearing in the Oct. 1 online edition of the journal Healthcare Management, Practice and Innovation.
Ho emphasized her findings contradict a public perception that the rising numbers of uninsured persons explains ...
California's new mental health system helps people live independently
2013-10-02
CORVALLIS, Ore. – A new analysis by Oregon State University researchers of California's mental health system finds that comprehensive, community-based mental health programs are helping people with serious mental illness transition to independent living.
Published in the October issue of the American Journal of Public Health, this study has important implications for the way that states finance and deliver mental health programs, and speaks to the effectiveness of well-funded, comprehensive community programs.
In November of 2004, California voters passed the Mental ...
Transgendered males seen as an asset to some ancestral societies
2013-10-02
Transgendered androphilic males were accepted in traditional hunter-gatherer cultures because they were an extra set of hands to support their families. Conversely, by investing in and supporting their kin, these males ensured that their familial line – and therefore also their own genetic make-up – passed on to future generations despite their not having children of their own. This is according to an ethnographic study led by Doug VanderLaan of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Canada, published in Springer's journal Human Nature. The study reports that this ...
Likelihood of childhood obesity is linked to weight gained by mother during pregnancy
2013-10-02
Women who gain excessive weight in pregnancy are more likely to have overweight and obese children, according to a new study published this week in PLOS Medicine. A study by David Ludwig from Boston Children's Hospital in the USA and colleagues has concluded that even after making allowances for differences in birthweight, the likelihood of a child becoming obese is linked to the amount of weight that the mother gained in pregnancy.
In order to find out whether childhood obesity was due just to the conditions during pregnancy (which influence birthweight) or whether ...
Oxytocin injection by health workers without midwifery skills can prevent bleeding after delivery
2013-10-02
Community health officers (health workers who are not trained midwives) can safely give injections of the drug oxytocin to prevent severe bleeding after delivery (postpartum hemorrhage) when attending home births in rural areas of Ghana, according to a study by US and Ghanaian researchers in this week's PLOS Medicine.
The researchers, led by Cynthia Stanton from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in the US, also found that oxytocin injections halved the risk of postpartum hemorrhage in women who delivered at home -- an important finding given that ...
Extended follow-up of hormone therapy trials does not support use for chronic disease prevention
2013-10-02
Extended follow-up of the two Women's Health Initiative hormone therapy trials does not support use of hormones for chronic disease prevention, although the treatment may be appropriate for menopausal symptom management in some women, according to a study in the October 2 issue of JAMA.
The hormone therapy trials of the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) were stopped after investigators found that the health risks outweighed the benefits. Menopausal hormone therapy continues in clinical use, but questions remain regarding its risks and benefits over the long-term for chronic ...
Following bariatric surgery, use of opioids increases among chronic opioid users
2013-10-02
In a group of patients who took chronic opioids for noncancer pain and who underwent bariatric surgery, there was greater chronic use of opioids after surgery compared with before, findings that suggest the need for proactive management of chronic pain in these patients after surgery, according to a study in the October 2 issue of JAMA.
"Bariatric surgery is used to treat obesity, as well as its comorbid conditions such as cardiovascular and metabolic diseases and chronic pain. Bariatric surgery-related weight loss is associated with improvements in osteoarthritis-associated ...
Study finds increase in survival following bystander CPR for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
2013-10-02
In Denmark between 2001 and 2010 there was an increase in bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) that was associated with an increase in survival following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, according to a study in the October 2 issue of JAMA.
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest affects approximately 300,000 individuals in North America annually. "Despite efforts to improve prognosis, survival remains low, with aggregated survival-to-discharge rates less than 8 percent. In many cases, time from recognition of cardiac arrest to the arrival of emergency medical services ...
Exercise 'potentially as effective' as many drugs for common diseases
2013-10-02
The researchers argue that more trials comparing the effectiveness of exercise and drugs are urgently needed to help doctors and patients make the best treatment decisions. In the meantime, they say exercise "should be considered as a viable alternative to, or alongside, drug therapy."
Physical activity has well documented health benefits, yet in the UK, only 14% of adults exercise regularly, with roughly one third of adults in England meeting recommended levels of physical activity. In contrast, prescription drug rates continue to skyrocket, sharply rising to an average ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A root development gene that’s older than root development
Research reveals missed opportunities to save George Floyd’s life
HKUST discovers novel elastic alloy achieving 20x temperature change and 90% carnot efficiency in solid-state heat pumping
Early prediction of preterm birth in cell-free RNA may revolutionize prevention strategies
Largest phase 3 trial of novel treatment for hypertension shows promising results
European regulation needed to prevent the birth of children with inherited cancer-causing genetic mutation after sperm donation
Assembly instructions for enzymes
Rice geophysicist Ajo-Franklin wins Reginald Fessenden Award for pioneering work in fiber optic sensing
Research spotlight: New therapeutic approach stops glioblastoma from hijacking the immune system
‘Hopelessly attached’: Scientists discover new 2D material that sticks the landing
Flowers unfold with surprising precision, despite unruly genes
Research spotlight: Study provides a window into public perceptions about technological treatment options for brain conditions
Sound insulation tiles at school help calm crying children #ASA188
More young adults than ever take HIV-prevention medication, but gaps remain
Why are some rocks on the moon highly magnetic? MIT scientists may have an answer
Unique chemistry discovered in critical lithium deposits
Numerical simulations reveal the origin of barred olivine crystals in early solar system
Daytime boosts immunity, scientists find
How marine plankton adapts to a changing world
Charge radius of Helium-3 measured with unprecedented precision
Oral microbiota transmission partially mediates depression and anxiety in newlywed couples
First vascularized model of stem cell islet cells
US excess deaths continued to rise even after the COVID-19 pandemic
Excess US deaths before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic
Millions of HealthCare.gov participants face coverage loss due to burdensome reenrollment policies, according to new research
Study: DNA test detects three times more lung pathogens than traditional methods
Modulation of antiviral response in fungi via RNA editing
Global, regional, and national burden of nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage
Earliest use of psychoactive and medicinal plant ‘harmal’ identified in Iron Age Arabia
Nano-scale biosensor lets scientists monitor molecules in real time
[Press-News.org] Early spring warming has greatest effect on breaking budHorticulture's zone maps may become unreliable as climate changes