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

Spring may come earlier to North American forests

2013-01-30
(Press-News.org) Trees in the continental U.S. could send out new spring leaves up to 17 days earlier in the coming century than they did before global temperatures started to rise, according to a new study by Princeton University researchers. These climate-driven changes could lead to changes in the composition of northeastern forests and give a boost to their ability to take up carbon dioxide.

Trees play an important role in taking up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, so researchers led by David Medvigy, assistant professor in Princeton's department of geosciences, wanted to evaluate predictions of spring budburst — when deciduous trees push out new growth after months of winter dormancy — from models that predict how carbon emissions will impact global temperatures.

The date of budburst affects how much carbon dioxide is taken up each year, yet most climate models have used overly simplistic schemes for representing spring budburst, modeling for example a single species of tree to represent all the trees in a geographic region.

In 2012, the Princeton team published a new model that relied on warming temperatures and the waning number of cold days to predict spring budburst. The model, which was published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, proved accurate when compared to data on actual budburst in the northeastern United States.

In the current paper published online in Geophysical Research Letters, Medvigy and his colleagues tested the model against a broader set of observations collected by the USA National Phenology Network, a nation-wide tree ecology monitoring network consisting of federal agencies, educational institutions and citizen scientists. The team incorporated the 2012 model into predictions of future budburst based on four possible climate scenarios used in planning exercises by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

The researchers included Su-Jong Jeong, a postdoctoral research associate in Geosciences, along with Elena Shevliakova, a senior climate modeler, and Sergey Malyshev, a professional specialist, both in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and associated with the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory.

The team estimated that, compared to the late 20th century, red maple budburst will occur 8 to 40 days earlier, depending on the part of the country, by the year 2100. They found that the northern parts of the United States will have more pronounced changes than the southern parts, with the largest changes occurring in Maine, New York, Michigan, and Wisconsin.

The researchers also evaluated how warming temperatures could affect the budburst date of different species of tree. They found that budburst shifted to earlier in the year in both early-budding trees such as common aspen (Populus tremuloides) and late-budding trees such as red maple (Acer rubrum), but that the effect was greater in the late-budding trees and that over time the differences in budding dates narrowed.

The researchers noted that early budburst may give deciduous trees, such as oaks and maples, a competitive advantage over evergreen trees such as pines and hemlocks. With deciduous trees growing for longer periods of the year, they may begin to outstrip growth of evergreens, leading to lasting changes in forest make-up.

The researchers further predicted that warming will trigger a speed-up of the spring "greenwave," or budburst that moves from south to north across the continent during the spring.

The finding is also interesting from the standpoint of future changes in springtime weather, said Medvigy, because budburst causes an abrupt change in how quickly energy, water and pollutants are exchanged between the land and the atmosphere. Once the leaves come out, energy from the sun is increasingly used to evaporate water from the leaves rather than to heat up the surface. This can lead to changes in daily temperature ranges, surface humidity, streamflow, and even nutrient loss from ecosystems, according to Medvigy.

### Citation:

Jeong, Su-Jong, David Medvigy, Elena Shevliakova, and Sergey Malyshev. 2013. Predicting changes in temperate forest budburst using continental-scale observations and models. Geophysical Research Letters. Article first published online: Jan. 25, 2013. DOI: 10.1029/2012GL054431

This research was supported by award NA08OAR4320752 from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Low-income pregnant women in rural areas experience high levels of stress, researcher says

2013-01-30
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Stress during pregnancy puts mothers' and their babies' health at risk, previous research has shown. Now, a University of Missouri study indicates low-income pregnant women in rural areas experience high levels of stress yet lack appropriate means to manage their emotional and physical well-being. Health providers should serve as facilitators and link rural women with resources. "Many people think of rural life as being idyllic and peaceful, but, in truth, there are a lot of health disparities for residents of rural communities," said Tina Bloom, assistant ...

Professional training 'in the wild' overrides laboratory decision preferences

2013-01-30
Many simulation-based studies have been conducted, and theories developed, about the behaviors of financial market traders. New work by human factors/ergonomics (HF/E) researchers suggests that decision-making research on the behavior of traders conducted "in the wild" (i.e., real-world situations) can offer an alternative lens that extends laboratory insights and provokes new questions. In their article in the Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making, "Understanding Preferences in Experience-Based Choice," authors Claire McAndrew (University College London) ...

NASA sees some powerful 'overshooting cloud tops' in Cyclone Felleng

NASA sees some powerful overshooting cloud tops in Cyclone Felleng
2013-01-30
NASA satellite imagery revealed that Cyclone Felleng is packing some powerful thunderstorms with overshooting cloud tops. An overshooting (cloud) top is a dome-like protrusion that shoots out of the top of the anvil of a thunderstorm and into the troposphere. It takes a lot of energy and uplift in a storm to create an overshooting top, because usually vertical cloud growth stops at the tropopause and clouds spread horizontally, forming an "anvil" shape on top of the thunderstorms. During the night-time hours (Madagascar local time) of Jan. 28, NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP ...

Study: Husbands who do more traditionally female housework have less sex

2013-01-30
WASHINGTON, DC, January 24, 2013 — Married men who spend more time doing traditionally female household tasks—including cooking, cleaning, and shopping—report having less sex than husbands who don't do as much, according to a new study in the February issue of the American Sociological Review. "Our findings suggest the importance of socialized gender roles for sexual frequency in heterosexual marriage," said Sabino Kornrich, the study's lead author and a junior researcher at the Center for Advanced Studies at the Juan March Institute in Madrid. "Couples in which men participate ...

More sex for married couples with traditional divisions of housework

2013-01-30
Married men and women who divide household chores in traditional ways report having more sex than couples who share so-called men's and women's work, according to a new study co-authored by sociologists at the University of Washington. Other studies have found that husbands got more sex if they did more housework, implying that sex was in exchange for housework. But those studies did not factor in what types of chores the husbands were doing. The new study, published in the February issue of the journal American Sociological Review, shows that sex isn't a bargaining ...

Free Marketing and Online Bookstore for Self-published Authors

2013-01-30
Self-published authors have more reasons to rejoice with the launch of Bookwhirl.com's latest services, the Bookstore and Book Gallery. With these services, these authors can now hope to take advantage of effective avenues wherein they can promote and market their books to their target readers. The Bookstore feature gives authors the option to display and sell their books to potential readers. Authors who gain revenues from the sales of their books on the Bookstore can receive 100% royalty, as he will act as the publisher of his own work. Readers who buy such books ...

Pervidi Safety Inspection Application from Techs4Biz to be presented at the 2013 Melbourne Safety in Action Show

2013-01-30
The Pervidi Safety Inspection solution assists with compliance and inspection activities related to all Safety Regulations. Pervidi enables field inspectors to collect data in the field using Mobile devices (Smart phones, Tablets, Laptops and PDAs). The safety data is stored in a central database (hosted or in-house) that enables management of safety activities, Compliance, Corrective Actions, and reporting. The Safety in Action Show, held at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre, will showcase the Pervidi Safety Inspection including the Android App by Techs4Biz. The Safety ...

Chef Roble Ali and Pyknic Collaborate on Food Themed Clothing Line, "Food Porn"

2013-01-30
The streetwear clothing line, Pyknic, has just released the debut range of its "Food Porn" collaboration with Bravo Television star, Roble Ali, of "Chef Roble & Co". Four designs consist of photographs taken at Chef Roble Ali's Brooklyn, NY kitchen, three of which the celebrity chef and Culinary Institute of America (Hyde Park) alumnus personally cooked and food-styled. The unique food-themed prints are featured on soft goods: t-shirts, crewneck sweatshirts, and hooded sweatshirts. Pyknic was worn by Roble thought the first season of "Chef ...

University-Model Private School Bringing Jobs to Austin, Texas

2013-01-30
Trinity Preparatory Academy (http://www.trinityprepacademy.com) will open its doors in Fall 2013 to almost 100 students in grades K-4. With this type of enrollment, nearly twenty teachers and staff members will be hired as well. Dr. Elizabeth Swanson, Research Assistant Professor at the University of Texas at Austin and Head of School for Trinity Preparatory Academy says, "We are proud not only to provide a unique school experience to the children of North Austin, Round Rock, and surrounding areas. We are also proud to contribute economically to the area." Dr. ...

Agathos Laboratories, Inc. (ALI) Receives Contract Award for Illicit Drugs and Controlled Substances Testing

2013-01-30
Silicon Valley based Agathos Laboratories, Inc. (ALI), a provider of cost effective laboratory testing, announced today that the company has been awarded a contract to provide laboratory testing for illicit drugs and controlled substances to licensees of the California Board of Chiropractic Examiners (BCE). The contract draws on ALI's ability to provide cost effective and dependable clinical laboratory testing to organizations in the public and private sectors. The BCE award provides ALI with yet another opportunity to showcase the benefits of a business strategy focused ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New breakthrough helps free up space for robots to ‘think’, say scientists

Environmental law reform needed to protect endangered marine species

UC Irvine-led team engineers new enzyme to produce synthetic genetic material

New study unveils unique combination of DNA techniques to authenticate ginseng supplements and combat adulteration

Argonne receives funding for artificial intelligence in scientific research

Significant worldwide disparities in availability and timeliness of new cancer drugs

4+ hour emergency care wait linked to heightened risks of death and longer hospital stay for hip fracture patients

Policy change may be helping to drive rise in treatment-resistant vaginal thrush

Heat stress may still affect babies once born, first evidence suggests

Stressed bees lack the buzz in life

UC Irvine researchers discover atomic-level mechanism in polycrystalline materials

USC’s Rong Lu and Caltech’s Michael B. Elowitz win the NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award for their new approach to study blood and immune cell production in bone marrow

Microwave-induced synthesis of bioactive nitrogen heterocycles

Research to use machine learning to ’reverse-engineer’ new composite materials

New research calls for transparency in Medicare Advantage operations

Applied Biological Laboratories, maker of Biovanta, to present at American Society of Microbiology’s Clinical Virology Symposium 2024

How academia drives sustainability: Discover the impact of science on the SDGs

NOAA awards grant to enhance decision-ready climate projections for diverse stakeholders

Why using a brand nickname in marketing is not a good idea

Asymmetric placebo effect in response to spicy food

Echoes in the brain: Why today’s workout could fuel next week’s bright idea

Salk Institute’s Nicola Allen receives 2024 NIH Director’s Pioneer Award

The secret strength of our cell guards

DataSeer and AAAS partner to boost reporting standards

Mizzou researchers awarded $8 million in grants to discover new bullying prevention strategies

Holographic 3D printing has the potential to revolutionize multiple industries, say Concordia researchers

Cerebral blood flow and arterial transit in older adults

How diabetes risk genes make cells less resilient to stress

Aerobic physical activity and depression among patients with cancer

Incidence of hospitalizations involving alcohol withdrawal syndrome

[Press-News.org] Spring may come earlier to North American forests