Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print A study proposes a new universal rule to explain the equilibrium of plant populations

A study proposes a new universal rule to explain the equilibrium of plant populations

September 19, 2007

The study shows how plants assure the survival of their species independently of life span

A study financed by the BBVA Foundation and conducted by scientists Carlos Duarte, Nuria Agustì and Nuria Marbà from the Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies (CSIC - University of the Balearic Islands) has allowed the first-time formulation of a universal rule that explains the equilibrium of plant communities, showing how plants assure the survival of their species whether their lives last a day or are prolonged over centuries.




The research project, whose results will appear in the next issue of the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, also concludes that the life span of these organisms may be sensitive to rises in temperature. According to the authors' predictions, the mortality of plants could increase by 40% if land temperatures rise by up to 4ºC (the rate of increase projected for the 21st century by climate change prediction models).

The reasons why organisms cease functioning and die is still one of the big questions for science. Some trees live for centuries while the smallest herbs last no more than a few months. However, there is no real reason why herbs should not, in theory, live as long as trees, given that all photosynthetic organisms - plants - can live indefinitely in the absence of disturbances.

The authors of the BBVA Foundation study examined the mortality and population growth rates of 700 phototrophs, ranging from the very smallest - the cells of the marine photosynthetic cyanobacteria Prochloroccocus (just half a micrometer across yet responsible for a considerable fraction of marine photosynthesis) - up to the largest species of trees, in search of general rules conducive to an improved understanding of plant life span regulation.

The results of the study identify phytoplankton as the shortest lived beings, with a span of around one day, while some trees reach ages of a thousand years. This was possible thanks to a methodology developed by Susana Agustí, using techniques that have permitted the first ever quantification of the cell death of phytoplankton.

The authors show that the same basic rules govern the longevity and birth rates of plants, such that the brief life span of the microscopic phytoplankton cells is offset by the vertiginous birth rates of populations, while centennial tree populations register no more than sporadic births.

Their findings provide the key to a universal regulation of the life span of photosynthetic organisms with reference to plant size and the temperatures they grow at, and suggest that the mortality rates of phototrophs evolve to match population growth rates. A further conclusion is that plant mortality is of necessity highly temperature-sensitive, such that climate change will tend to accelerate the phototroph death rates which are an essential part of the food chain. As stated, the authors estimate that plant mortality could increase by 40% in the event of an up to 4ºC increase in land temperatures (the rate foreseen for the 21st century by most climate change prediction models).

The balance between longevity and birth rates in photosynthetic organisms is what keeps their populations stable. In the event of a serious mismatch between plant mortality and birth rates, these populations would either be driven to extinction (if death rates far exceeded births) or would outgrow available resources of light, water and food with the same inevitable result (in the case of births far exceeding deaths).

Fundación BBVA



Related Plant Population Current Events and Plant Population News Articles
Why are there so many weeds in your garden this year?
Some years, no matter how diligently you pull, your backyard garden is always covered with weeds. Other years, with the minimum of effort, your garden remains weed-free.

Invasive species harms native hardwoods by killing soil fungus
An invasive weed that has spread across much of the U.S. harms native maples, ashes, and other hardwood trees by releasing chemicals harmful to a soil fungus the trees depend on for growth and survival.

Illinois research zeroing in on optimum soil nitrogen rates
A new study to evaluate the Illinois Soil N Test (ISNT) calls into question traditional soil fertility recommendations and promises a radical new soil-based approach that will benefit crop yields, the environment, and the bottom line for farmers.

Invitation to the Media - Leading scientists describe their work at Royal Society seminar
Leading experts on cloning, the human genome, computer microprocessors, earthquakes and conservation will be describing their work at the Royal Society on 10 and 11 July. The annual Royal Society New Fellows Seminar will showcase the groundbreaking work carried out by new Fellows and Foreign Members elected this year. The speakers will include: Professor Stephen Furber, who helped design the world's leading embedded processor core for digital equipment; Professor Nicholas Hastie, who led the team that first demonstrated the tips of human chromosomes shorten with age; Dr Georgina Mace, who devised international standards for identifying plant and animal species that are at greatest risk of ex
More Plant Population Current Events and Plant Population News Articles


Monitoring Plant and Animal Populations
by Caryl L. Elzinga, Daniel W. Salzer, John W. Willoughby, James P. Gibbs

Monitoring Plant and Animal Populations offers an overview of population monitoring issues that is accessible to the typical field biologist and land managers with a modest statistical background. The text includes concrete guidelines for ecologists to follow to design a statistically defensible monitoring program.User-friendly, practical guide, written in a highly readable format. The authors...



Dispersal in Plants: A Population Perspective (Oxford Biology)
by Roger Cousens, Calvin Dytham, Richard Law

This advanced textbook is the first to explore the consequences of plant dispersal for population and community dynamics, spatial patterns, and evolution. It successfully integrates a rapidly expanding body of theoretical and empirical research. DT The first comprehensive treatment of plant dispersal set within a population framework DT Examines both the processes and consequence of dispersal DT...



Feeding the Ten Billion: Plants and Population Growth
by Lloyd T. Evans

At the current rate of increase, the world's population is likely to reach ten billion by the middle of the twenty-first century. What will be the challenges posed by feeding this population and how can they be addressed? Written to mark the 200th anniversary of the publication of Malthus' seminal Essay on the Principle of Population, this fascinating book looks at the intimate links between...

Population Biology of Plants
by John L. Harper



Introduction to Plant Population Biology
by Jonathan Silvertown, Deborah Charlesworth

This completely revised, fourth edition of Introduction to Plant Population Biology continues the approach taken by its highly successful predecessors. Ecological and genetic principles are introduced and theory is made accessible by clear, accurate exposition with plentiful examples. Models and theoretical arguments are developed gradually, requiring a minimum of mathematics.The book emphasizes...



Population Viability in Plants: Conservation, Management, and Modeling of Rare Plants (Ecological Studies)

Providing a quantitative assessment of threatened plant populations, that holds for varying management scenarios, has become an essential part of conservation planning. Here, renowned plant ecologists provide information on: major threats to plants, when and where to conduct a plant viability assessment (PVA), what type of PVA to conduct, what alternative options to PVA are available, what...



Population Ecology: A Unified Study of Animals and Plants
by Michael Begon, Martin Mortimer, David J. Thompson

Worldwide, Population Ecology is the leading textbook on this titled subject. Written primarily for students, it describes the present state of population ecology in terms that can be readily understood by undergraduates with little or no background in the subject. Carefully chosen experimental examples illustrate each topic, and studies of plants and animals are combined to show how fundamental...



Methods in Comparative Plant Population Ecology
by David J. Gibson

This new book is intended to assist senior undergraduates and post-graduate students design their own experiments and establish a research program in plant population ecology. Practical advice is provided on how to set up a research program, how to ask pertinent questions and use science process skills in conducting research. Individual chapters cover facets of experimental design, statistics,...

Introduction to Plant Population Ecology
by Jonathan Silvertown

Plant Population Genetics, Breeding, and Genetic Resources
by Anthony H. D. Brown, Michael T. Clegg

© 2009 BrightSurf.com