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

Can this forest survive? Predicting forest death or recovery after drought

Can this forest survive? Predicting forest death or recovery after drought
2023-08-30
(Press-News.org) How long can trees tolerate drought before the forest dies?

Researchers from UC Davis can now predict which forests could survive despite future drought. Their new method links precipitation to tree growth, and it can help people decide where to put their resources as climate change affects patterns of snow and rainfall that impact the health of forests.

“If a forest is doing OK, but in the future we know it’s likely to get only half the average rainfall it used to get, we can calculate the likelihood it will die,” said Jessie Au, a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Plant Sciences. She works with Troy Magney, an associate professor in the department. 

The tool that Au and team developed will help anyone managing forests or using forests to store climate-warming air-borne carbon. That is of growing interest because companies are increasingly investing in forest lands to offset their greenhouse gas emissions. Forests breathe in carbon dioxide from the air and turn the carbon into food, storing it in their trunks, roots and leaves.

But trees need water to breathe in that air-borne carbon. If they don’t get enough water, they can live off their reserves of stored carbon for a while. Like starving people living off first their fat, then consuming their own muscle, trees eventually reach a tipping point. Either rains return, and trees can recover and start making food again, or drought continues, and the forest starves to death.

Au and team discovered that tipping point by studying a forest devastated by drought in California’s southern Sierra Nevada. There, in the years following the record-shattering drought of 2012 to 2015, millions of trees died, as happened across the American West. Au’s team linked changes in precipitation during that period to life processes inside the trees, and showed the lag time between the stress of drought and trees’ response.

A paper describing this link, and the tool they adapted to measure a forest’s chances of surviving, was published recently in the journal Global Change Biology. Researchers included Chris Wong, a project scientist also with Magney’s Plant Optics Lab.

Tracking the death slide in real time In their study, Au’s team looked at precipitation, soil moisture and temperature in the forest, and measured how much carbon dioxide the trees were breathing in. Using a new methodology, dubbed CARDAMOM, they linked that information to figure out how much carbon the trees were putting into their reserves, such as wood, roots and leaves, and they tracked how the reserves dwindled as the drought wore on.

When the drought started in 2012, they found trees continued to appear all right for a few years, as they lived off their reserves. However, by 2015, the trees passed a tipping point: They had used up their reserves, and 80 percent of the trees in that forest were functionally dead. They could no longer convert carbon dioxide into food.

As Au and others continue to build on CARDAMOM, it could offer even more information about what is happening inside trees during drought and other stresses, then predict how the forest will cope with future drought.

“With this new methodology, we can now link drought to tree death later on, and we can assign a number to that risk,” Au said. “It’s helping us identify vulnerable spots and whether we can save them.”

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Can this forest survive? Predicting forest death or recovery after drought Can this forest survive? Predicting forest death or recovery after drought 2 Can this forest survive? Predicting forest death or recovery after drought 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How Norway is helping to restore humanity inside U.S. prisons

2023-08-30
As part of an innovative prison reform program, the Oregon State Penitentiary created a healing garden on its grounds to provide some respite from the concrete and resemble the outside world. One incarcerated man who had spent most of the past two decades in solitary confinement described going to the garden as, “the first time I walked on grass in 20 years.”  “Many of us have found beauty in weeds and flowers growing through the cracks in the pavement,” he told UC San Francisco researchers, who helped institute and then evaluated the reforms. “There is both beauty and inspiration in knowing that we, ...

Statistics can help us figure out how historic battles could have turned out differently, according to experts

2023-08-30
Quantifying Counterfactual Military History probes whether historic battles and military interventions could have turned out quite differently Oxford, U.K., 30 August 2023 – Statistical methods can evaluate whether pivotal military events, like the Battle of Jutland, American involvement in the Vietnam war or the nuclear arms race, could’ve turned out otherwise, according to a new book. Military historical narratives and statistical modelling bring fresh perspectives to the fore in ...

Using neuroscience to stop phantom braking

Using neuroscience to stop phantom braking
2023-08-29
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Recently, when customers began complaining that their vehicles with driver-assistance technologies were “phantom braking” or slamming on the brakes without any visible obstacles present, researchers at Michigan State University wanted to learn more about this phenomenon — why it happens and how to stop it. “Frequent phantom braking incidents can erode confidence in autonomous driving technologies,” said Qiben Yan, an assistant professor in the College of Engineering. “If riders perceive the technology as unpredictable or unreliable, they’ll be less likely to embrace it.” Autonomous vehicles have a vision system, ...

Sensitive parenting and preschool attendance may promote academic resilience in late preterm infants

2023-08-29
Late preterm infants, or infants born between 34 and 36-6/7 weeks gestation, are the majority of infants born preterm, and are at greater risk for academic delays compared to full term infants. Certain factors, including a low level of maternal education, prenatal tobacco use, twins/multiple gestation and male sex increased the risk for deficits in math and reading by kindergarten for late preterm infants, a new study finds. However, sensitive parenting and preschool enrollment are two possible ways to counter the risk of being born late preterm, and to promote academic resilience. “Our findings highlight an opportunity for pediatric providers to offer prevention strategies ...

New imaging technique could provide clearer images for oncologists

New imaging technique could provide clearer images for oncologists
2023-08-29
A multidisciplinary team lead by University of Texas at Arlington mathematics Assistant Professor Souvik Roy is on a mission to improve medical imaging using a new technique called quantitative photoacoustic tomography (QPAT).A multidisciplinary team lead by University of Texas at Arlington mathematics Assistant Professor Souvik Roy is on a mission to improve medical imaging using a new technique called quantitative photoacoustic tomography (QPAT). QPAT is an imaging modality that combines ultrasound, which is an imaging technique that uses sound waves to image features inside ...

Neptune's disappearing clouds linked to the solar cycle

Neptunes disappearing clouds linked to the solar cycle
2023-08-29
Astronomers have uncovered a link between Neptune's shifting cloud abundance and the 11-year solar cycle, in which the waxing and waning of the Sun's entangled magnetic fields drives solar activity. This discovery is based on three decades of Neptune observations captured by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, as well as data from the Lick Observatory in California. The link between Neptune and solar activity is surprising to planetary scientists because Neptune is our solar system's farthest major planet and receives sunlight with about 0.1% ...

Liver-targeting drug reverses obesity, lowers cholesterol in mice

Liver-targeting drug reverses obesity, lowers cholesterol in mice
2023-08-29
A University of Massachusetts Amherst biomedical engineer has used a nanogel-based carrier designed in his lab to deliver a drug exclusively to the liver of obese mice, effectively reversing their diet-induced disease. “The treated mice completely lost their gained weight, and we did not see any untoward side effects,” says S. Thai Thayumanavan, distinguished professor of chemistry and biomedical engineering. “Considering 100 million Americans have obesity and related cardiometabolic disorders, we became pretty excited about this work.”  Efforts ...

MIND Institute director calls for new approach to equity in autism, fragile X research

MIND Institute director calls for new approach to equity in autism, fragile X research
2023-08-29
UC Davis MIND Institute Director Leonard Abbeduto is calling for a major shift in the way research into autism and other neurodevelopmental disabilities is conducted. He co-authored a paper titled “Toward Equity in Research on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities” that was the basis for a special issue of the American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. The issue was published today.   Abbeduto, a distinguished professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, argues that researchers ...

Rapid shifts from drought to downpour occurring more often

Rapid shifts from drought to downpour occurring more often
2023-08-29
New research shows that wild swings from severe drought to heavy rains are becoming more common with climate change in many parts of the world and that feedback loops from the land itself are likely contributing to the trend. The research looked at four decades of meteorological and hydrological data on a global level and found seven regional hotspots around the world where the trend was getting worse: eastern North America, Europe, East Asia, Southeast Asia, southern Australia, southern Africa, and southern South America. “We are especially concerned with the sudden shift from drought to flood,” said coauthor Zong-Liang Yang, a professor at The University of Texas at Austin Jackson ...

Hemp helps to heal

Hemp helps to heal
2023-08-29
A few days ago, the federal government took the controversial decision to make the acquisition and possession of small amounts of cannabis exempt from punishment. Provided the German parliament approves the draft bill, the “Cannabis Act” will come into force next year. While some consider this move to be long overdue, others continue to warn strongly against the health risks of cannabis use. The Jena researchers and their colleagues are now taking a different look at cannabis – at the traditional medicinal ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New battery cathode material could revolutionize EV market and energy storage

Inexpensive drug can prevent cerebral palsy in premature babies

Studying sex-specific pain levels in wheelchair users

UChicago Medicine performs first-in-Illinois procedure to treat bladder leaks

Previously unknown Neolithic society in Morocco discovered: shining light on North Africa’s role in Mediterranean prehistory

Study finds PrEP use among gay and bisexual men in Ontario linked to higher STI rates

Technology-assisted health coaching intervention does not improve weight loss in veterans and high-risk patients

Underserved patients reduce blood pressure and heart disease risk using remote monitoring program

The HOMER study evolves to adapt opioid treatment research amid COVID-19 challenges

High-sensitivity troponin shows promise in diagnosing acute coronary syndrome in primary care settings

September/October Annals of Family Medicine Tip Sheet

Risk model identifies advanced cancer trial patients at highest risk for acute care use

Robust family medicine residency programs help residents meet scholarly output requirements

Using transparent capsules in dry powder inhalers could significantly improve medication delivery

Family physicians in rural hospitals associated with lower cesarean rates and safer maternal care culture

Long COVID patients seek better collaboration with health care professionals

EHR messaging before first visit fosters a stronger patient-physician connection

SETI AIR announces Cosmic Consciousness residency recipients

Australian crater could offer fresh insight into Earth’s geological history

New study raises questions about validity of standard model of solar flares

Paving the way for new treatments

Dream discovery: Melatonin's key role in REM sleep revealed

Research quantifying “nociception” could help improve management of surgical pain

How cranes navigate their complex world

New origami-inspired system turns flat-pack tubes into strong building materials

Low gravity in space travel found to weaken and disrupt normal rhythm in heart muscle cells

New approach to defibrillation may improve cardiac arrest outcomes

UTA undergraduate researcher wins state honor

Novel method detects biological oxidant derived from CO2 in cells

American Cancer Society experts presenting key research at 2024 ASCO Quality Care Symposium

[Press-News.org] Can this forest survive? Predicting forest death or recovery after drought