The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Extreme heat represents a new threat to trees and plants

- By Nathan Gilles, Columbia Insight

PORTLAND, ORE. >> From June 25 to July 2, 2021, the Pacific Northwest experience­d a record-breaking heat wave that sent the normally temperate region into Death Valley-like extremes that took a heavy toll on trees as well as people.

Seattle and Portland, Ore., recorded their hottesteve­r temperatur­es, reaching 108 and 116 degrees, respective­ly. In British Columbia, the small town of Lytton reached 121 degrees.

What become known as the “heat dome” is estimated to have killed hundreds of people in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia.

As this human tragedy unfolded, a lesser-known ecological tragedy was happening, one that scientists warn has grim repercussi­ons for the world’s plants and the many animal species that depend on them.

In a matter of a few days, the 2021 heat dome turned many of the green leaves and needles on the region’s trees to orange, red and brown.

But, as recent research suggests, tree foliage didn’t simply dry out in the heat. Instead, it underwent “widespread scorching.”

“A lot of this reddening and browning of leaves was just that the leaves cooked. It really wasn’t a drought story,” said Chris Still, professor at Oregon State University’s College of Forestry and a leading researcher on the effects of heat on trees.

Still is part of a growing number of scientists investigat­ing what they say is a new, woefully underestim­ated threat to the world’s plants: climate change-driven extreme heat.

10 species decline

In recent years, scientists in the Pacific Northwest have linked the decline of 10 native tree species to drought.

In many cases, conditions that have brought about the decline are known as “hot droughts.”

Driven by above-normal temperatur­es, hot droughts can be far more damaging to trees than droughts that result simply from a lack of moisture. Hot droughts not only dry out soil; they also dry out the air.

This stresses trees, and can cause water-carrying tissues inside them to collapse — a process called “hydraulic failure.”

In a paper earlier this year in the journal Tree Physiology, Still made the case that damage to the region’s trees during the heat dome was triggered primarily by direct damage from heat and solar radiation rather than indirectly by drought caused by the extreme heat.

“I’m not trying to say that drought is not a huge and important factor,” said Still. “But I think with events like the 2021 heat wave becoming more common and intense, it’s important to look at the response of trees and other plants to these events and not just at drought, which has been the dominant paradigm.”

Still’s argument includes the observatio­n that “foliage scorch” was primarily found on the southern and western sides of trees and forests — a pattern that follows the track of the sun across the summer sky.

“Basically, it was like a sunburn across the entire forest. It was quite disturbing,” said co-author Daniel DePinte, U.S. Forest Service aerial survey program manager, who observed the phenomenon from an airplane.

Multiple tree species were scorched, DePinte said, noting that the role played by the sun became clear when the same trees were viewed from an orientatio­n not exposed to direct sunlight.

“It almost appeared as if the forest damage disappeare­d,” he said.

The paper was written in response to an earlier study published in the same journal that argued a different position: that the heat dome led to widespread drought stress and hydraulic failure in Pacific Northwest trees.

“Overall I agree ... that heat damage played a big role in the damage caused to trees (during) the 2021 PNW heat wave. But in my view, hydraulic failure was as important, if not more,” wrote that study’s lead author Tamir Klein, professor of plant and environmen­tal sciences at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel.

Exactly how hot is too hot for trees and other plants is the research focus of William Hammond, a plant ecophysiol­ogist at the University of Florida.

‘Blind spot’

Hammond called the scientific community’s current understand­ing of extreme heat’s effect on plants a worrying “blind spot.”

“One thing is for sure, we know a lot more about how dry is too dry for plant survival than we know about how hot is too hot,” he said.

What scientists call “thermal tolerances” have been establishe­d for just 1,028, or less than 1%, of the world’s 330,200 recognized land-based plants, according to a frequently cited 2020 paper in The Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

No single thermal limit fits all plant species, but in general extreme damage to plant tissues occurs around 122 degrees, Hammond said.

“With those temperatur­es you might think ‘Wow, the air doesn’t get that hot,’ but that’s the temperatur­e of the plant, not the temperatur­e of the air. And those things can be quite different,” he said.

Just how different is something Still has been tracking.

During the heat dome, he and colleagues recorded air temperatur­es around a Douglas fir tree reaching 112 degrees, the hottest ever recorded in the forest where the measuremen­ts were taken. The needles of the tree, however, reached 124 due to exposure to direct sunlight.

Still says observatio­ns like this and similar ones in forests around the world dispute a common misconcept­ion even among some scientists that plants can withstand extreme temperatur­es and stay cooler than air around them, especially when given access to water.

“Plants can control their temperatur­e to some degree, but if the heat is extreme enough, some plants won’t be able to get through it even if they have a ton of water,” he said.

Hammond has reached the same conclusion based on work in his lab. “If temperatur­e gets high enough, heat stress can kill living plant tissues even if they have water,” said Hammond.

 ?? AMANDA LOMAN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Peter Beedlow, scientist at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, with Douglas fir trees that died from insect damage following heat stress in the Willamette National Forest, Ore.
AMANDA LOMAN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Peter Beedlow, scientist at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, with Douglas fir trees that died from insect damage following heat stress in the Willamette National Forest, Ore.

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