. Energy News .




.
FARM NEWS
Autumn advantage for invasive plants in eastern United States
by Staff Writers
Syracuse, NY (SPX) Apr 27, 2012

Fridley set up an experimental garden on SU's South Campus that includes groups of native plants and their non-native cousins, such as Japanese honeysuckle (invader) and Canada honeysuckle (native), burning bush (invader) and bursting heart (native), and European buckthorn (invader) and Carolina buckthorn (native).

Much like the fabled tortoise and the hare, the competition between native and invasive plants growing in deciduous forests in the Eastern United States is all about how the plants cross the finish line in autumn.

A new study by a Syracuse University biologist has found that the leaves of invasive plants continue to function in the fall, long after their native cousins have hunkered down for the winter. The findings are counter to conventional wisdom, which held that plants living under the forest leafy canopy obtain most of their food via photosynthesis in the spring and early summer before the canopy blocks the amount of sunlight getting to the shrubs.

The study, "Extended leaf phenology and the autumn niche in deciduous forest invasions," will be published online in Nature. "It's a classic case of scientific serendipity," says study author Jason Fridley, assistant professor of biology in SU's College of Arts and Sciences.

"We set up the experiment to quantify the amount of photosynthesis happening in the spring when both groups of plants were thought to be most active. But we found it was all about the finish. This was totally off of everybody's radar."

Many of the plants growing naturally under the forest canopy in the eastern United States, including New York, Pennsylvania and New England, are closely related to those that have been imported for more than 100 years, primarily from Europe, China and Japan, for cultivation in home gardens. The imported plants have invaded the surrounding forests and thrived. Scientific research is focused on uncovering strategies the invaders use that make them so successful.

Fridley set up an experimental garden on SU's South Campus that includes groups of native plants and their non-native cousins, such as Japanese honeysuckle (invader) and Canada honeysuckle (native), burning bush (invader) and bursting heart (native), and European buckthorn (invader) and Carolina buckthorn (native). His research team monitored the plants for three years, recording when the leaves burst, turned brown and dropped.

They also used devices to measure leaf chlorophyll and photosynthesis throughout the leaf growing and dying seasons.

The research team found little differences between the spring emergence of leaves in native and their non-native cousins, the timing of which for both groups varied in response to spring temperatures. They also found little differences in spring food production between the groups.

Most significantly, the researchers found that the invaders retained their leaves and continued to photosynthesize almost four weeks longer into the fall than their native cousins, which begin shutting down between late August and mid-September.

"The extended leaf activity we found in the invaders is rarely seen in native species that inhabit deciduous forests," Fridley says. "However, the data don't tell us whether this is the primary strategy invasive plants use to compete with native species."

The plants in the study have had separate evolutionary histories since at least the Pleistocene Age (11,400 to 2 million years ago). Climate conditions over the North American continent were colder with more ice coverage than Asia, Fridley says. Native species responded to the shorter growing seasons by pulling nitrogen from their leaves to store in the stems, causing the leaves to turn brown and fall off.

"Invaders don't appear to store as much nitrogen," Fridley says. "Their leaves fall off with a higher nitrogen content. It may be that the invasive species are better suited a warming climate."

Which begs the question of how the invaders gain back in the spring the nitrogen that falls to the forest floor in the fall. "One hypothesis," Fridley says, "is that invaders evolved by depending on earthworms to decompose the leaves, making nitrogen available in the spring for the plants." Native plants did not evolve with earthworms because native earthworms did not survive glaciation.

"Eurasian earthworms invaded North America at some point in the past," Fridley says. "It's conceivable that having co-evolved with earthworms, the invaders would devise a nutrient-use strategy that was not dependent on re-absorbing the nutrients from the leaves."

The larger question for scientists is, how does an increase in the amount of nutrient-rich leaf litter affect the overall forest-floor ecosystem? "It's possible the extended growing season of non-native shrubs in deciduous forests may be a major driver of human-induced ecosystem change in eastern North America that may rival climate change in its impact on forest processes," Fridley says.

Related Links
Syracuse University
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



FARM NEWS
History is key factor in plant disease virulence
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 26, 2012
The virulence of plant-borne diseases depends on not just the particular strain of a pathogen, but on where the pathogen has been before landing in its host, according to new research results. Scientists from the University of California System and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service (USDA ARS) published the results in the journal PLoS ONE. The study de ... read more


FARM NEWS
Risat-1 catapults India into a select group of nations

NASA's Landsat Satellites See Texas Crop Circles

Google blasts FCC handling of 'Street View' probe

Latest CryoSat result revealed

FARM NEWS
First payload ready for next batch of Galileo satellites

NASA Tests GPS Monitoring System for Big US Quakes

SSTL delivers payload for first Galileo FOC satellite

GPS could aid in earthquake warnings

FARM NEWS
Bolivian natives begin new march in road protest

Do urban 'heat islands' hint at trees of future?

Palms reveal the significance of climate change for tropical biodiversity

Rousseff pressed to veto Brazil forestry law

FARM NEWS
Climate change, biofuels mandate would cause corn price spikes

How the Ecological Risks of Extended Bioenergy Production can be Reduced

Optimizing biofuel supply chain is a competitive game

ANA Celebrate First 787 Biofuel Flight

FARM NEWS
SunWize Completes the Largest Solar Installation for American Samoa Power Authority

Researchers develop a path to liquid solar cells that can be printed onto surfaces

Ambitious Solar Program in India Drives Prices to Impressive Lows

Scientists discover bilayer structure in efficient solar material

FARM NEWS
DoD, Navy and Wind Farm Developer Release Historic MoA

British engineering firm creates 1,000 wind farm jobs

Cape Wind picks contractors for wind farm

Reducing cash bite of wind power

FARM NEWS
Nine die in China coal mine blast

Buy coal? New analysis shows purchasing fossil fuel deposits best way to fight climate change

At least 15 dead in two China mine floods

Coal India faces government pressure

FARM NEWS
Chinese blind lawyer escapes house arrest

Chinese activist latest held after Chen escape

China pulls T-shirts featuring premier's quotes

China shuts 'rumour' blogs in Internet crackdown


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement