Tag-Archive for » bpr «

June 05th, 2008 | Author: sarcozona

ResearchBlogging.org

Pinyon pine cover quite a bit of the west. Economically, they’re good for pine nuts and fence posts. Ecologically, of course, they’re a lot more important than that. They’re also very important in figuring out what the climate was like a long time ago since their needles can be found in packrat middens dating back around 40,000 years.

There isn’t just one kind of pinyon. For a while taxonomists thought there were two kinds: Pinus edulis and P. monophylla. P. edulis has two needles in a fascicle and P. monophylla has one needle in a fascicle. Fascicles are the little clusters pine needles grow in.

fascicle

Then two other pinyon with only one needle per fascicle were identified, one as P. edulis var fallax and the other as Pinus californiarum. If that’s not confusing enough, there are regions where pinyon have one AND two needle fascicles on the same tree.

Zavarin et al. looked at monoterpene content to classify all these pinyon (don’t plants make cool chemicals?), and concluded that all of the single needle pinyon were subspecies of P. monophylla. But then a study on chloroplast DNA completely contradicted that.

So pretty much everyone disagrees on how to separate these trees. Everyone does agree, however, that these trees are all really closely related. Several people have also noticed that the trees with two fascicle types often have more one needle fascicles in dry growth years.

The authors of this study wanted to know where each kind of pinyon grows and if the climate is different. Since nobody can decide how to separate the trees, the authors came up with their own classification based on needle type that worked out really well. Between all these tree types, there are only 4 kinds of needles. The needles were classified by number of needles in a fascicle, shape, thickness, number of resin ducts, and stomatal lines. Resin ducts carry resin (which bugs don’t like to eat) throughout the needle and stomatal lines are lines of stomata (which I described in this post).

There’s one two needle pinyon (P. edulis) and three single needle pinyon. The fallax type needles are thin and the P. monophylla and californiarium-type needles are fat. The californiarium type needles have way more resin ducts and fewer stomatal lines than P. monophylla, though.

So the authors looked at a ton of needles from all over the southwest and separated them into these four types. They also checked out needles from dry and wet years in one of the overlap zones. Then they mapped that info out and matched locations with climate data.

Interestingly, even in the overlap zones, the four needle types don’t change. This is important since a lot of people think that these trees are hybrids

If hybridizatization of two species is occurring, it seems to only affect the tree as a whole. Individual needles on the trees usually fit as one of these four needle types, regardless of their frequency on the tree.

The needle types only seem to mix in two ways: P. edulis and fallax type or P. edulis and P. monophylla. On trees with more than one needle type, the single needle types are more common in dry years, though there is a lot of variation between trees.

The unmixed trees had ranges that matched specific climate types. P. monophylla and californiarum type grow where there is more winter precipication, but P. edulis and fallax type grow where the precipitation is biseasonal. Both the fallax and californiarum type are prevalent where early summers are very dry.

So what does this all mean?

First, the biggest thing separating needle types is climate. It also looks like P. edulis, P. monophylla, and fallax type might all be the same species responding to water availability: P. edulis needles looks like P. monophylla needles cut in half. Fallax type needles look like P. edulis where one needle in the fascicle was aborted. Trees that grow in “in between” climates might be choosing which needle type to have based on the water availability that year. These scenarios are not only drought adaptive, they also fit well with the chloroplast DNA study.

The way the needle types are separated by climate is really cool because it could allow us to get at the seasonality of precipitation in climate reconstructions. It will also help us get better at predicting how pinyon will respond to climate in the future.

pinyon
Cole, K.L., Fisher, J., Arundel, S.T., Cannella, J., Swift, S. (2007). Geographical and climatic limits of needle types of one- and two-needled pinyon pines. Journal of Biogeography DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2699.2007.01786.x

Zavarin, E., Snajberk, K., Cool, L. (1990). Chemical differentiation in relation to the morphology of the single-needle pinyons. Biochemical Systematics and Ecology, 18(2-3), 125-137.

May 28th, 2008 | Author: sarcozona

ResearchBlogging.org

Carbon dioxide levels have been increasing since the industrial revolution and have been increasing really really fast since the 1950s. You’ve all seen the hockey stick graph.

hockey stick graph

I’ve been looking at pinyon pine tree rings for the past year and think there might be something going on with increasing CO2 and what the rings are doing. So I’ve got a stack of papers to read through and thought I’d share some of them with all of you.

Carbon dioxide is pretty good for plants because plants need carbon for photosynthesis. We’re interested in what higher levels of CO2 will do to plants because if plants are growing more and eating more carbon dioxide it could help slow down global warming. But giving most plants most places extra carbon dioxide doesn’t seem to do much in the long run because plants need lots of other things to grow, like nitrogen and water, and carbon isn’t usually the most limiting. It’s the same for you: it doesn’t matter how many vegetables you eat if there’s no water.

But what about plants where carbon might be a limiting factor for growth? Carbon can be limiting in hot, dry places because to get carbon, plants have to lose water. Plants have little tiny pores in their leaves called stomata. They have to open these to let in CO2, but water escapes whenever they’re open. A lot of plants that live in hot, dry places have evolved a different kind of photosynthesis to deal with this.

stoma

Another place carbon might be limiting is at very high elevations. Atmospheric CO2 concentrations decrease with increasing elevation. That means that in the same amount of space there’s less CO2. This happens to all gases. Flagstaff is above 2000 meters. When people move here, they have a hard time breathing for awhile because of the lower oxygen concentration.

Lamarche et al. looked at tree rings in the 1980s of bristlecone pine growing at 3100 meters. They found that the trees had increasing growth since about 1840. Initially they thought that this was due to warmer temperatures, but then when it cooled down in the 60s, the trend kept going and even accelerated. So, the faster growth wasn’t due to hotter temperatures.

bristlecone

But was it caused by higher CO2 levels? Plants can only use so much CO2, no matter how much is available. Like at Thanksgiving dinner, there’s lots of food available, but you can only eat so much. In the 1960s, CO2 was between 223 and 230 ppm at 3500 meters. For spruce, that concentration is well below what it considers CO2 saturation and so is probably well below what bristlecone considers saturation.

While the authors didn’t really have enough data from enough places to say for sure CO2 makes trees growing at high altitudes grow more, what they do have certainly suggests it.

This paper is over 20 years old, so we’ll see what more recent papers have found…

LAMARCHE, V.C., GRAYBILL, D.A., FRITTS, H.C., ROSE, M.R. (1984). Increasing Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide: Tree Ring Evidence for Growth Enhancement in Natural Vegetation. Science, 225(4666), 1019-1021. DOI: 10.1126/science.225.4666.1019