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

Extreme, multi-year droughts drive cumulative collapse in terrestrial productivity

Summary author: Walter Beckwith

2025-10-16
(Press-News.org) Although many ecosystems can weather several years of moderate drought, consecutive years of extreme dryness push them past a tipping point, resulting in dramatic declines in plant growth, researchers report. The findings – borne from a global experiment spanning six continents – reveal threats to Earth’s grasslands and shrublands as climate extremes intensify. Although most droughts are brief and moderate, the most ecologically and economically damaging events are both prolonged and extreme. Evidence suggests such extreme events are becoming more frequent with ongoing climate change. However, the effects of multi-year droughts on ecosystems remain poorly understood. While some studies show cumulative declines in ecosystem functioning over time, others suggest that ecosystems can acclimate, stabilizing their productivity despite prolonged stress.

 

Here, Timothy Ohlert and colleagues present findings from the International Drought Experiment (IDE), a coordinated multi-year rainfall-exclusion experiment assessing the effects of drought duration and severity on ecosystem productivity in 74 grassland and shrubland ecosystems across six continents. Ohlert et al. found that many ecosystems generally maintained productivity under moderate or less severe, multi-year droughts; although productivity dropped sharply in the first year of drought, they did not continue to decline in subsequent years, indicating ecosystem acclimation rather than cumulative loss. However, extreme droughts (e.g., 1-in-100 year events) resulted in steep and progressively larger declines in productivity as duration increased. The severity of the current year’s drought was the strongest predictor of productivity decline, yet by years three and four, extreme droughts intensified this negative effect. Sites subjected to consecutive extreme drought years experienced the most dramatic impacts, with productivity falling roughly 2.5 times – from 29% in year one to 77% by year four. According to the authors, these cumulative declines are likely due to species mortality, failed establishment, and changes in community composition. “The discovery that the resistance to drought duration of grasslands and shrublands rapidly eroded with prolonged drought of extreme intensity portends an uncertain future for these ecosystems,” Ohlert et al. write, “threatening their long-term stability and the ecosystem goods and services they provide.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers chart path for investors to build a cleaner aviation industry

2025-10-16
Cutting planet-warming pollution to near-zero will take more than inventing new clean technologies—it will require changing how the world invests in them. That’s especially true for industries like aviation, where developing and adopting greener solutions is risky and expensive, according to a University of California San Diego commentary piece in Science.  The paper calls for smarter ways of managing investment risk could help speed up the shift toward cleaner air travel and other hard-to-decarbonize sectors.   “The aviation sector—a ...

USTC scientists uncover mystery of neurotransmission with time-resolved cryo-ET

2025-10-16
A research team led by Prof. BI Guo-Qiang from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), in collaboration with several domestic and international institutions, has resolved a 50-year-old controversy in neuroscience. By employing a self-developed, time-resolved cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) technique, the team has delineated the intricate choreography of synaptic vesicle (SV) release and rapid recycling, the cornerstone of neural communication. Their findings, which introduce a new biophysical mechanism termed the “Kiss-Shrink-Run”, ...

New study finds large fluctuations in sea level occurred throughout the last ice age, a significant shift in understanding of past climate

2025-10-16
CORVALLIS, Ore. — Large changes in global sea level, fueled by fluctuations in ice sheet growth and decay, occurred throughout the last ice age, rather than just toward the end of that period, a study publishing this week in the journal Science has found. The findings represent a significant change in researchers’ understanding of how the Pleistocene – the geological period from about 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago and commonly known as the last ice age – developed, said Peter Clark, a paleoclimatologist at Oregon State University ...

Study reveals how bacteria in tumors drive treatment resistance in cancer

2025-10-16
Researchers uncovered a previously unknown way for microbes within tumors to contribute to treatment resistance in certain cancers  Study finds these microbes push cancer cells into a reversible resting state, allowing them to become resistant to certain chemotherapies  Scientists hope understanding the microbe-tumor relationship will enhance future cancer treatment  HOUSTON, OCTOBER 16, 2025 – Researchers from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have discovered a previously unknown mechanism that explains how bacteria can drive treatment resistance in patients with oral and colorectal cancer. The study was published today in ...

Language barriers in health care have fallen – but not online, study shows

2025-10-16
In recent years, Americans have gotten used to logging on to a patient portal through their smartphone or computer to have telehealth appointments with their doctors and health care teams, see their prescriptions and lab test results, send messages to their providers, and much more. But a new study suggests that the integration of this technology into many aspects of patient care may have created an unintended barrier to healthcare access for the more than 25 million patients with limited English proficiency. The study finds that the patient portal login page for many hospitals is not accessible ...

What vibrating molecules might reveal about cell biology

2025-10-16
Infrared vibrational spectroscopy at BESSY II can be used to create high-resolution maps of molecules inside live cells and cell organelles in native aqueous environment, according to a new study by a team from HZB and Humboldt University in Berlin. Nano-IR spectroscopy with s-SNOM at the IRIS beamline is now suitable for examining tiny biological samples in liquid medium in the nanometre range and generating infrared images of molecular vibrations with nanometre resolution. It is even possible to obtain 3D information. ...

UIC study of blood stem cells asks: Can we slow aging on a cellular level?

2025-10-16
As our hairs go gray and our muscles weaken with age, our immune system also changes. In particular, the stem cells that become blood or immune cells can develop mutations, potentially leading to cancers or other dysfunctions. Researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago have discovered an important cellular mechanism that drives this aging: the lack of a protein called platelet factor 4, whose levels decrease with age, they report in the journal Blood. What’s more, adding this protein to old blood cells reversed these signs of aging, which points to a promising therapeutic target for preventing ...

Palm oil isn’t necessarily less sustainable than other oils, say conservationists

2025-10-16
Palm oil isn’t inherently bad, and olive oil isn’t inherently good, conservation scientists say in an opinion paper publishing October 16 in the Cell Press journal Cell Reports Sustainability. They argue that the vegetable oil industry is haunted by narratives and myths about different types of oil crops, but the reality is much more nuanced. Almost all oils—including soybean, olive, coconut, and sesame oil—are associated with biodiversity and human rights issues in some contexts, depending on crop management and supply chains. The researchers call ...

A hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy of space immunology

2025-10-16
With the advent of commercial spaceflight, an increasing number of people may be heading into space in the coming years.  Some will even get a chance to fly to the Moon or live on Mars.  One of the major health risks associated with spaceflight involves the immune system, which normally fights off viruses and cancer. It’s already established that spaceflight weakens immunity; current and past astronauts report clinical issues such as respiratory illnesses and skin rashes. These issues may become even more serious on longer-terms ...

Mysterious glow in Milky Way could be evidence of dark matter

2025-10-16
Johns Hopkins researchers may have identified what could be a compelling clue in the ongoing hunt to prove the existence of dark matter.  A mysterious diffuse glow of gamma rays near the center of the Milky Way has stumped researchers for decades, as they’ve tried to discern whether the light comes from colliding particles of dark matter or quickly spinning neutron stars.  It turns out that both theories are equally likely, according to new research published today in the journal Physical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study shows medical-legal partnerships aid recovery for patients with violent injuries

Learning the language of lasso peptides to improve peptide engineering

Social conflict among strongest predictors of teen mental health concerns

New framework can improve the planning stage of surgical quality improvement projects

Research shows anger, not fear, shifts political beliefs

Gale and Ira Drukier Prize in Children’s Health Research awarded to pediatric rheumatologist at Boston Children’s Hospital

UNF chemistry professor awarded NSF Grant to advance laser-based measurement technology

Research shows how Dust Bowl-type drought causes unprecedented productivity loss

Non-hibernating pikas' protein restriction tweaks their gut microbiome to help them survive the winter, when winter-active herbivores often struggle to find dietary protein

Not for hearing but for symbiosis

Disconnected cerebral hemisphere in epilepsy patients shows sleep-like state during wakefulness

Incentivizing risk to inspire investments in clean innovation for aviation

Stinkbug leg organ contains symbiotic fungi to shield eggs from parasitic wasps

Extreme, multi-year droughts drive cumulative collapse in terrestrial productivity

Researchers chart path for investors to build a cleaner aviation industry

USTC scientists uncover mystery of neurotransmission with time-resolved cryo-ET

New study finds large fluctuations in sea level occurred throughout the last ice age, a significant shift in understanding of past climate

Study reveals how bacteria in tumors drive treatment resistance in cancer

Language barriers in health care have fallen – but not online, study shows

What vibrating molecules might reveal about cell biology

UIC study of blood stem cells asks: Can we slow aging on a cellular level?

Palm oil isn’t necessarily less sustainable than other oils, say conservationists

A hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy of space immunology

Mysterious glow in Milky Way could be evidence of dark matter

Pathogenic germline variants in cancer susceptibility genes

Discrimination experiences among medical students

Pickleball-related ocular injuries among patients presenting to emergency departments

Ganoderma lucidum alleviates high-fat diet-induced hepatic lipotoxicity via modulating the unfolded protein response and endoplasmic reticulum-phagy

Circularly polarized luminescence enhancement in rare-earth MOFs due to framework chirality and host–guest energy transfer

Nickel-substituted polyoxometalate-CdS single-cluster photocatalysts for efficient plastic waste degradation coupled with H2 production

[Press-News.org] Extreme, multi-year droughts drive cumulative collapse in terrestrial productivity
Summary author: Walter Beckwith