Read the
magazine
story to find out more.
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ARS researchers have been studying plant reactions
to changes in C02 levels, from the Ice Age13,000 to 18,000 B.C.to
the year 2050 A.D. by growing them in long, plastic-covered "time
tunnels."
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Time-Tunneling for Climate Change Clues
By Don Comis
November 20, 2009 If you look closely at individual
plant species' responses in the past, you may find that the largest effects of
high carbon dioxide (CO2) levels occurred decades ago, according to
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists. That is when the botanical structure of the world's grasslands
changed dramatically, offering clues to the future.
For several years,
Wayne
Polley and
Philip
Fay, ecologists at the ARS
Grassland
Soil and Water Research Laboratory in Temple, Texas, have been studying
plant reactions to a gradient of CO2 levels, from the Ice
Age13,000 to 18,000 B.C.to the year 2050 A.D. Their research
supports the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's priority of developing long-range global change strategies.
The ecologists do their research with "time tunnels." These are
long, plastic-covered tunnels in which tall prairie grasses are exposed to
increasing levels of CO2. These tunnels are an alternative to
traditional open-top outdoor chambers in which plants are exposed to only one
level of CO2 per chamber.
Among their recent findings is that grasses respond to higher CO2
levels by using water more efficiently. They have been measuring plant water
use for four years now, ever since they modified the tunnels by placing them
over steel-lined, soil-filled pits with soil-weighing lysimeters to measure
soil water loss.
More efficient water use by prairie grasses sounds like a good thing, but
weedy shrubs and grasses also benefit from increased water use efficiency. This
may help weeds outcompete desirable forage plants. But the cumulative effects
of these individual species' responses on plant communities won't be obvious
for years.
Read
more about this and other climate change research in the November/December
2009 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
ARS is USDAs principal intramural scientific research agency.