Los Alamos Study: Oldest, Tallest Trees Will Die First, Altering Forests, Releasing Carbon
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Using Darcys law an equation that describes the flow of water through a porous medium researchers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory looked at what types of vegetation might survive best, and which would most likely die first, due to global warming. The equation takes into account things like plant height and leaf area, among other factors, to measure how effectively water can move through the plant. The researchers found that the plants that were most likely to survive were short plants with smaller leaf area. Tall trees with large leaf area, on the other hand, were the most likely to die. Global warming is global, and all vascular plants obey Darcys law, Nathan McDowell, co-author of the study, told ThinkProgress. The implications of this is the whole world, anywhere there is plants.
A crucial component of the equation is vapor pressure deficit how much moisture the air holds versus how much moisture it can possibly hold. McDowell previously found that even if precipitation trends dont change, atmospheric warming causes the vapor pressure deficit to go up, which makes conditions feel drier for plants. That means that the holes on the leaves of plants stomata, which allow water out and CO2 in will lose more water in 50 years than they will today, McDowell said, and are losing more water today than they did 50 years ago.
As atmospheric temperature and the vapor pressure deficit increase, plants can do a few things to make up for the loss of water through their stomata, like shedding leaves. But those measures only go so far. At some point, McDowell said, its healthier for the ecosystem to replace large trees with plants better adapted to using water in a warmer environment. The amount of warming we know is going to happen based on climate change, they can only reduce foliage so much, McDowell said. The main outcome is we predict that tall trees in particular should be the most vulnerable.
Widespread death of tall, old trees would have a large impact on a forest ecosystem not to mention the effect it would have on worsening climate change even further. Its the big trees that store the most carbon, McDowell said, noting that the tall trees are also those that do the most photosynthesis, pulling more carbon out of the atmosphere than small trees. Animals also tend to prefer old-growth trees to small, young plants, so a widespread dying of large trees could potentially displace species that depend on old trees for their habitat.
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http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/05/20/3660666/climate-change-tree-death-study/