394 research outputs found

    Interactions between metal and drought stressors on plant water relationships and their effects at ecosystem level

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    Heavy metals influence plant traits that are relevant to its internal water status. Therefore, knowledge of metal effects on a plant’s ability to tolerate other stresses such as drought is important to ensure sustainability of restoration efforts in contaminated landscapes, often prone to drought. The aim of this thesis was to gain understanding how heavy metal contamination influences plant-water relationships and how this interacts with effects of a simultaneous drought. Levels ranging from organs to ecosystem processes were investigated. Chapter 1 briefly reviews published studies on interactions between metal and drought stress and highlights potential gaps in literature. Chapter 2 presents results of a 2-year outdoor lysimeter study on the effects of Cu-Ni toxicity on plant-water relationships using saplings of Acer rubrum, Betula papyrifera, and Quercus rubra. The study shows that under elevated metal levels the plants use less water but suffer drought symptoms even if there is water available. Chapter 3 investigates, using B. papyrifera, whether such metal effects on water use are a result of short-term exposure of roots on their water uptake capacity, or due to long-term structural damage e.g. on hydraulic architecture. Both effects were found, but were smaller than hypothesized. In Chapter 4 influence of metals on plant’s vulnerability to xylem embolisms in Acer rubrum saplings is found to be higher in the metal contaminated region of Sudbury, Ontario, compared to surrounding uncontaminated regions. Chapter 5 establishes guidelines and limitations for transporting leaves from field to laboratory when measuring leaf relative water content, a method that is important for studying plant water relations in the field. Finally, I conclude with a general overall summary of results and proposed suggestions for reclamation projects.Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Boreal Ecolog

    The costs of saving nature: Does it make “cents”?

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    Clearing wild forests to grow food, fibre, and fuel products can deliver large financial gains. However, the benefits that people obtain from forests—known as ecosystem services—are rarely considered in economic calculations, partly because there are few markets onto which they can be traded. In some regions, the benefits delivered by nature might be more economically valuable. A new study maps where it is profitable to replace tropical forests with cropland and how this might change under future agricultural production and carbon prices. The findings address a major applied challenge by helping to identify sites where forest conservation can be economically viable

    Integrating demography and distribution modeling for the iconic <i>Leontopodium alpinum</i> Colm. in the Romanian Carpathians.

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    Both climate change and human exploitation are major threats to plant life in mountain environments. One species that may be particularly sensitive to both of these stressors is the iconic alpine flower edelweiss (Leontopodium alpinum Colm.). Its populations have declined across Europe due to over-collection for its highly prized flowers. Edelweiss is still subject to harvesting across the Romanian Carpathians, but no study has measured to what extent populations are vulnerable to anthropogenic change.Here, we estimated the effects of climate and human disturbance on the fitness of edelweiss. We combined demographic measurements with predictions of future range distribution under climate change to assess the viability of populations across Romania.We found that per capita and per-area seed number and seed mass were similarly promoted by both favorable environmental conditions, represented by rugged landscapes with relatively cold winters and wet summers, and reduced exposure to harvesting, represented by the distance of plants from hiking trails. Modeling these responses under future climate scenarios suggested a slight increase in per-area fitness. However, we found plant ranges contracted by between 14% and 35% by 2050, with plants pushed into high elevation sites.Synthesis. Both total seed number and seed mass are expected to decline across Romania despite individual edelweiss fitness benefiting from a warmer and wetter climate. More generally, our approach of coupling species distribution models with demographic measurements may better inform conservation strategies of ways to protect alpine life in a changing world

    Seed size and its rate of evolution correlate with species diversification across angiosperms

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    Species diversity varies greatly across the different taxonomic groups that comprise the Tree of Life (ToL). This imbalance is particularly conspicuous within angiosperms, but is largely unexplained. Seed mass is one trait that may help clarify why some lineages diversify more than others because it confers adaptation to different environments, which can subsequently influence speciation and extinction. The rate at which seed mass changes across the angiosperm phylogeny may also be linked to diversification by increasing reproductive isolation and allowing access to novel ecological niches. However, the magnitude and direction of the association between seed mass and diversification has not been assessed across the angiosperm phylogeny. Here, we show that absolute seed size and the rate of change in seed size are both associated with variation in diversification rates. Based on the largest available angiosperm phylogenetic tree, we found that smaller-seeded plants had higher rates of diversification, possibly due to improved colonisation potential. The rate of phenotypic change in seed size was also strongly positively correlated with speciation rates, providing rare, large-scale evidence that rapid morphological change is associated with species divergence. Our study now reveals that variation in morphological traits and, importantly, the rate at which they evolve can contribute to explaining the extremely uneven distribution of diversity across the ToL
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