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May 7, 2007 A The findings,
reported in paper
set to appear this week in the online edition of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, present a notable
exception to the commonly held idea that tropical plants are highly
specialized
in their own little environmental niches – and thus very
sensitive to
disturbances of those niches. That could be good
for the plants
because climate change is expected to radically alter rainfall patterns
in the
tropics. But it comes with a caveat: Nutrient uptake is only one of
many
ingredients in plant life. Other unrelated changes that accompany a
warming
climate could still affect plant distribution and growth, such as those
that
hold sway over pollinators, insect predators or invasive plants. "These plants should
be able
to do OK in terms of their nitrogen nutrition, even with the climate
changing," said Ted Schuur, a UF assistant professor of ecology and one
of
four authors of the paper. "But of course, we only studied one group of
organisms and one mechanism in this study" and plants depend on many
different mechanisms to coexist, some of which may also change with
changing
rainfall. The scientists
researched plant
growth at six sites on the slopes of "That's the range of
rainfall you might find across the entire tropics, but that would
usually be
over hundreds or thousands of kilometers," Schuur said. "I can visit
all of these forest sites in a single day." The scientists
analyzed nitrogen
isotopes in the soil and leaf samples of four plant species at each
site. They
learned that drier soils contained more nitrogen in the form of
nitrate, while
wetter soils contained more nitrogen in the form of ammonia. Isotopic
analysis
of the plants revealed that they switched from nitrate to ammonia
"abruptly, and in unison" once the rainfall reached a certain level. "There's an abrupt
change
halfway through the rainfall gradient, and they all switch to this
other form
for their nutrition," Schuur said. That's a surprise
partly because
of the uniformity of response, he said. Such uniformity sharply
contrasts the
conventional notion that tropical plant species coexist by adopting
widely
different strategies to getting what they need. At least with regard to
nitrogen uptake, all the Hawaiian plants acted the same -- and at the
same
time. " … This
does not support
the idea that natural selection has caused species to diverge into
highly
specialized niches for nitrogen consumption," the PNAS paper says. That's a positive
sign
considering that as the Earth warms, some areas of the tropics are
widely
expected to be wetter, some drier. So, at least one of dozens of
variables that
will change with precipitation changes – nutrient uptake
– might not affect
tropical plants. That said, plenty of others could, Schuur said.
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