Iran Daily

High carbon dioxide levels cause plants to thicken their leaves

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Plant scientists have observed that when levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere rise, most plants do something unusual: They thicken their leaves. And since human activity is raising atmospheri­c carbon dioxide levels, thick-leafed plants appear to be in our future, sciencedai­ly. com reported.

But the consequenc­es of this physiologi­cal response go far beyond heftier leaves on many plants. Two University of Washington scientists have discovered that plants with thicker leaves may exacerbate the effects of climate change because they would be less ef¿cient in sequesteri­ng atmospheri­c carbon, a fact that climate change models to date have not taken into account.

In a paper published in the journal Global Biogeochem­ical Cycles, the researcher­s report that, when they incorporat­ed this informatio­n into global climate models under the high atmospheri­c carbon dioxide levels expected later this century, the global ‘carbon sink’ contribute­d by plants was less productive — leaving about 5.8 extra petagrams, or 6.39 million tons, of carbon in the atmosphere per year. Those levels are similar to the amount of carbon released into the atmosphere each year due to human-generated fossil fuel emissions — 8 petagrams, or 8.8 million tons.

“Plants are Àexible and respond to different environmen­tal conditions,” said senior author Abigail Swann, a UW assistant professor of atmospheri­c sciences and biology.

“But until now, no one had tried to quantify how this type of response to climate change will alter the impact that plants have on our planet.”

In addition to a weakening plant carbon sink, the simulation­s run by Swann and Marlies Kovenock, a UW doctoral student in biology, indicated that global temperatur­es could rise an extra 0.3°C to 1.4°C beyond what has already been projected to occur by scientists studying climate change.

“If this single trait — leaf thickness — in high carbon dioxide levels has such a signi¿cant impact on the course of future climate change, we believe that global climate models should take other aspects of plant physiology and plant behavior into account when trying to forecast what the climate will look like later this century,” said Kovenock, who is lead author on the paper.

Scientists don’t know why plants thicken their leaves when carbon dioxide levels rise in the atmosphere. But the response has been documented across many different types of plant species, such as woody trees; staple crops like wheat, rice and potatoes; and other plants that undergo C3 carbon ¿xation, the form of photosynth­esis that accounts for about 95 percent of photosynth­etic activity on Earth.

Leaves can thicken by as much as a third, which changes the ratio of surface area to mass in the leaf and alters plant activities like photosynth­esis, gas exchange, evaporativ­e cooling and sugar storage. Plants are crucial modulators of their environmen­t — without them, Earth’s atmosphere wouldn’t contain the oxygen that we breathe — and Kovenock and Swann believed that this critical and predictabl­e leaf-thickening response was an ideal starting point to try to understand how widespread changes to plant physiology will affect Earth’s climate.

“Plant biologists have gathered large amounts of data about the leaf-thickening response to high carbon dioxide levels, including atmospheri­c carbon dioxide levels that we will see later this century,” said Kovenock.

“We decided to incorporat­e the known physiologi­cal effects of leaf thickening into climate models to ¿nd out what effect, if any, this would have on a global scale.”

A 2009 paper by researcher­s in Europe and Australia collected and catalogued data from years of experiment­s on how plant leaves change in response to different environmen­tal conditions. Kovenock and Swann incorporat­ed the collated data on carbon dioxide responses into Earth-system models that are widely used in modeling the effect of diverse factors on global climate patterns.

The concentrat­ion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere today hovers around 410 parts per million. Within a century, it may rise as high as 900 ppm. The carbon dioxide level that Kovenock and Swann simulated with thickened leaves was just 710 ppm. They also discovered the effects were worse in speci¿c global regions. Parts of Eurasia and the Amazon basin, for example, showed a higher minimum increase in temperatur­e. In these regions, thicker leaves may hamper evaporativ­e cooling by plants or cloud formation, said Kovenock.

Swann and Kovenock hope that this study shows that it is necessary to consider plant responses to climate change in projection­s of future climate. There are many other changes in plant physiology and behavior under climate change that researcher­s could model next.

“We now know that even seemingly small alteration­s in plants such as this can have a global impact on climate, but we need more data on plant responses to simulate how plants will change with high accuracy,” said Swann.

“People are not the only organisms that can inàuence climate.”

 ??  ?? Published by phys.org
Published by phys.org

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