Prolonged effects of a warming anomaly on grasslands
Professors Yiqi Luo, Linda Wallace and Rebecca Sherry in the Department of Botany and Microbiology coauthored a paper with colleagues Jay Arnone and Paul Verburge at the Desert Research Institute; Dale Johnson from the University of Nevada at Reno; David Chimel from the National Center for Atmospheric Research; and others to report their findings on the long-term effects of warming anomaly on grassland productivity and ecosystem carbon cycling. According to the paper, the research team excavated 12 soil monoliths, each weighing 12 tons, from the University of Oklahoma Kessler Farm Field laboratory. The monoliths were trucked to Reno, Nevada and housed in a greenhouse for four years. They were acclimated to the control environment in the greenhouse in the first year. Then, six of the 12 monoliths were subjected to warming treatments of 4 degrees Celsius and the rest remained in a control environment of average central Oklahoma conditions for the second year. In the third and fourth years, both control and warming-treated monoliths were kept at the control conditions.
The research team found that warming by 4 degrees Celsius in the Reno greenhouse not only depressed plant growth and suppressed land carbon absorption in the treatment year but also resulted in prolonged suppression of plant growth and carbon absorption in the following year.
Source: University of Oklahoma
Related
- Global warming's ecosystem double whammyWed, 17 Sep 2008, 13:30:01 EDT
- Nitrogen mysteries in urban grasslandsTue, 13 Oct 2009, 14:34:58 EDT
- New study finds that some plants can adapt to widespread climate changeTue, 8 Jul 2008, 15:42:41 EDT
- 2-million-year-old evidence shows tool-making hominins inhabited grassland environmentsWed, 21 Oct 2009, 2:18:28 EDT
- Climate change enhances grassland productivityMon, 26 Jan 2009, 11:09:44 EST
Other sources
- Prolonged effects of a warming anomaly on grasslandsfrom PhysorgWed, 24 Sep 2008, 10:42:07 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Learn more about
Popular science news articles
- New study finds men and women may respond differently to danger
- Study shows new brain connections form rapidly during motor learning
- Traditional indigenous fire management techniques deployed against climate change
- Caltech scientists explain puzzling lake asymmetry on Titan
- Spinons -- confined like quarks
- Supervolcano eruption -- in Sumatra -- deforested India 73,000 years ago
- Polyphenols and polyunsaturated fatty acids boost the birth of new neurons
- First black holes may have incubated in giant, starlike cocoons, says CU-Boulder study
- First-ever blueprint of a minimal cell is more complex than expected
- Brain's fear center is equipped with a built-in suffocation sensor
- New evidence that dark chocolate helps ease emotional stress
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- Nanoparticles used in common household items caused genetic damage in mice
- New study links vitamin D deficiency to cardiovascular disease and death
- Therapy 32 times more cost effective at increasing happiness than money