PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Temperature found to be most significant driver of the world's tallest trees

2014-01-07
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Ben Norman
Sciencenewsroom@wiley.com
44-012-437-70375
Wiley
Temperature found to be most significant driver of the world's tallest trees Understanding forest biodiversity and how carbon dioxide is stored within trees is an important area of ecological research. The bigger the tree, the more carbon it stores and a study in New Phytologist explores global variance in tree height, identifying temperature as the most important factor behind the tallest species.

Height gives canopy trees, the focus of much forest carbon research, a competitive advantage as they can place leaves at higher light levels while suppressing their competitors. Height also allows for wind-dispersed pollen and fruits to travel further.

The new study explores the role of temperature in driving tree height, a study which may allow us to forecast how forests adapt to climate change. The research examined the temperature-driven physiological model of tree height in order to explain the thermal climates in which the tallest individuals of the tallest tree species grow.

The tallest specimens of the world's nine tallest tree species were found to grow in climates with an unusually small seasonal temperature variation, which accounted for only 2.1% of global land area. In contrast their distance from the equator ranged from 3900 to 5500 km, their altitude above sea level from 50 to 1750 m, and the distance between the most distant localities ranged from 2700 km in Australia to 1400 km in western North America.

"It is amazing how little we know about the causes of global tree size variation even though not knowing current variation makes predicting climate change caused changes difficult or impossible," said Markku Larjavaara. "If trees will get bigger in the future they will store more carbon than they do now and would therefore mitigate climate change."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

MRSA drug dosage calculations found to be inaccurate for children over 10

2014-01-07
MRSA drug dosage calculations found to be inaccurate for children over 10 The emergence of MRSA (Staphylococcus aureus), dubbed a 'superbug' due to its resistance to many antibiotic drugs, has resulted in the glycopeptide antibiotic Vancomycin being commonly prescribed for patients ...

New global stroke repository offers regional comparative statistics

2014-01-07
New global stroke repository offers regional comparative statistics In many countries strokes are seen as a lower priority when compared to other diseases despite their public health impact. This is partly due to a lack of readily accessible data to make the case for the development ...

Vikings & superheroes: How interconnected characters may reveal the reality behind the stories

2014-01-07
Vikings & superheroes: How interconnected characters may reveal the reality behind the stories The Icelandic sagas of the Norse people are thousand-year-old chronicles of brave deeds and timeless romances, but how true to Viking life were they? Writing in Significance, Pádraig ...

New, simple technique may drive down biofuel production costs

2014-01-07
New, simple technique may drive down biofuel production costs Researchers at North Carolina State University have developed a simple, effective and relatively inexpensive technique for removing lignin from the plant material used to make biofuels, which ...

Beating the poppy seed defense: New test can distinguish heroin use from seed ingestion

2014-01-07
Beating the poppy seed defense: New test can distinguish heroin use from seed ingestion Heroin is one of the most widely used illegal drugs in the world, but drug testing has long been challenged by the difficulty in separating results of illicit heroin users from those who ...

Neurotransmitters resarch can promote better drugs for brain disorders

2014-01-07
Neurotransmitters resarch can promote better drugs for brain disorders Hebrew University scientists decipher mechanism Jerusalem, January 7, 2014 -- Although drugs have been developed that inhibit the imbalance of neurotransmitters in the brain – ...

The 5 fingers of our feathered friends: New research results on the evolution of bird wings

2014-01-07
The 5 fingers of our feathered friends: New research results on the evolution of bird wings In most tetrapods (land vertebrates) the fourth (ring) finger is the first to develop in the embryo. And in birds, the finger on the outside of the hand (posterior, ...

Gemini Planet Imager first light

2014-01-07
Gemini Planet Imager first light World's most powerful exoplanet camera turns its eye to the sky This news release is available in Spanish. After nearly a decade of development, construction, and testing, the world's most advanced instrument for directly imaging ...

To keep their eye on the ball, batters mostly use their heads

2014-01-07
To keep their eye on the ball, batters mostly use their heads How do hitters track pitches in baseball? Study in optometry and vision science gives new insights Philadelphia, Pa. (January 7, 2014) - Baseball players at bat follow coaches' advice to "keep ...

New algorithm can dramatically streamline solutions to the 'max flow' problem

2014-01-07
New algorithm can dramatically streamline solutions to the 'max flow' problem Research could boost the efficiency even of huge networks like the Internet Finding the most efficient way to transport items across a network like the U.S. highway system or the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Data-driven analysis reveals three archetypes of armed conflicts

Heart disease, stroke deaths down, yet still kill more in US than any other cause

Light switches made of ultra-thin semiconductor layers

Creative talent: has AI knocked humans out?

Sculpting complex, 3D nanostructures with a focused ion beam

A year after undermining Bredt’s rule, UCLA scientists have made cage-shaped, double-bonded molecules that defy expectations

Human activities drive global dryland greening

PeroCycle announces new appointments as it builds a world-class board for meaningful climate impact

Magnetic avalanches power solar flares

LeapSpace goes live: the Research-Grade AI-Assisted Workspace built on trusted science

DNA tests reveal mysterious beluga family trees

Strategic sex: Alaska’s beluga whales swap mates for long-term survival

How early cell membranes may have shaped the origins of life

Cannabis legalization is driving increases in marijuana use among U.S. adults with historically lower consumption rates

Multifunctional dipoles enabling enhanced ionic and electronic transport for high‑energy batteries

Triboelectric nanogenerators for future space missions

Advancing energy development with MBene: Chemical mechanism, AI, and applications in energy storage and harvesting

Heteroatom‑coordinated Fe–N4 catalysts for enhanced oxygen reduction in alkaline seawater zinc‑air batteries

Meta-device for precision lateral displacement sensing

Plasma-guided mitotane for the treatment of adrenocortical carcinoma: adjuvant care to advanced disease

Theoretical study of laser-enhanced nuclear fusion reactions

Social environment impacts sleep quality

Optimized kinetic pathways of active hydrogen generation at Cu2O/Cu heterojunction interfaces to enhance nitrate electroreduction to ammonia

New design playbook could unlock next generation high energy lithium ion batteries

Drones reveal how feral horse units keep boundaries

New AI tool removes bottleneck in animal movement analysis

Bubble netting knowledge spread by immigrant humpback whales

Discovery of bats remarkable navigation strategy revealed in new study

Urban tributaries identified as major sources of plastic chemical pollution in the Yangtze River

UK glaucoma cases higher than expected and projected to reach 1.6 million+ by 2060

[Press-News.org] Temperature found to be most significant driver of the world's tallest trees