Houston Chronicle

NEWS AND NOTES ABOUT SCIENCE

DURING A SOLAR ECLIPSE, WHAT ARE PLANTS DOING?

- — Cara Giaimo

As the total solar eclipse crossed South America, it wasn’t just people oohing and ahhing as the sun was blotted out.

Other living things had their own responses, too — some of which we are just beginning to understand. As some scientists used the Great American Eclipse in August 2017 to watch how bees and birds dealt with sudden midday darkness, researcher­s in Wyoming investigat­ed big sagebrush, a shaggy, aromatic desert shrub that grows throughout the western United States.

Tracking its reactions at the leaf level, scientists saw it experience a slowdown in activity as darkness fell, followed by shock at the sun’s surprise return. The study, published in June in Scientific Reports, adds to a small clump of botanical eclipse research, all produced by people with the ability to wonder, even as a celestial event occurs: What are the plants getting up to?

“Plants haven’t really been well-documented during the eclipse,” said Daniel Beverly, a doctoral student in botany and hydrology at the University of Wyoming and the paper’s lead author. When he heard an eclipse was coming, he saw the chance for “a once-in-a-lifetime data set.”

Big sagebrush spends much of its life in the sun, and “it covers such a large portion of the country,” from Oregon down to New Mexico, Beverly said, making it a good subject for study. He and his colleagues chose a patch close to Yellowston­e National Park. They set up instrument­s that could measure photosynth­etic rate, as well as the speed of transpirat­ion — how quickly its leaves lose water.

As the light faded and the temperatur­e dropped during the 80 or so minutes before totality, Beverly and his team saw a correspond­ing decrease in photosynth­esis and transpirat­ion. “The plant responded as if it was dusk,” he said.

During the 2 minutes and 18 seconds of complete darkness, both rates fell further. Although they did not quite reach the slowdown level of an average nighttime, it was a much more precipitou­s drop than would have occurred for a passing cloud.

But when the sun appeared again, the shrubs were blindsided.

Over the course of the eclipse day, the team estimated, your average big sagebrush managed about 14% less photosynth­esis than it would have if the sun hadn’t been blocked. If a plant is already drought-stressed, an eclipse might be bad news, like “losing 14% of a day’s income when you’re already broke,” Beverly said.

 ?? New York Times ?? Daniel Beverly was among the researcher­s who investigat­ed how plants deal with a solar eclipse.
New York Times Daniel Beverly was among the researcher­s who investigat­ed how plants deal with a solar eclipse.

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