Plants have
evolved many specialised adaptations to enable them to live in a wide range of
conditions but what happens when their environment
changes?
Plants are sessile organisms, literally rooted to the spot, so if the conditions where they live become unfavourable they cannot move to a more favourable area. For instance, they may be subject to changes in water or nutrients supply, light or temperature: here I want to focus on temperature in particular. Plants experience climate with some seasonal variation but they may also be exposed to short-term fluctuations in temperature due to local weather conditions. These changes in temperature impact on the plant’s growth, function and development (phenology). In the long term adaptation may occur, or there may be a change in the range in which the species can live. However, in the short term, plants need to adjust to the local conditions to ensure survival, growth and ultimately reproduction.
It is important
to understand how plants will respond to climate change as this will have
impacts on biodiversity and also on crop productivity and quality, and hence
food security. In addition plants are major determinants of
CO2 turnover in the atmosphere (Schimel et al. 2001) through the processes of photosynthesis and
respiration. Both of these processes are
sensitive to temperature, with rates increasing with increased temperature. However, there may be an adjustment in the
rate of the process to compensate for the initial change in temperature; this is known as acclimation and
may moderate the response.
We can use our knowledge of how changing temperatures will affect photosynthesis
and respiration at the leaf level of individual leaves to scale these processes
up to predict the responses of ecosystems to global change. For example, we incorporated thermal
acclimation of respiration into a coupled-global climate vegetation model. The
results indicated that while incorporating acclimation of respiration had little
effect on predicted global
atmospheric CO2 levels, the response varied between biomes which
could have land use management implications (Atkin et al. 2008).
Arabidopsis thaliana grown at 23oC in controlled environment conditions |
The paper is available online at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pce.12460/abstract
References
Atkin OK, Atkinson LJ, Fisher RA, Campbell CD, Zaragoza-Castells J,
Pitchford JW, Woodward FI, and Hurry VM (2008) Using
temperature-dependent changes in leaf scaling relationships to quantitatively
account for thermal acclimation of respiration in a coupled global climate-vegetation
model. Global Change Biology 14: 1-18
Atkinson LJ,
Sherlock DJ and Atkin OK (2014) Source
of nitrogen associated with recovery of relative growth rate in Arabidopsis thaliana acclimated to
sustained cold treatment. Plant, Cell and
Environment Article first published online: 7 Dec 2014 | DOI:
10.1111/pce.12460
Schimel DS, House JI, Hibbard KA et al. (2001) Recent
patterns and mechanisms of carbon exchange by terrestrial ecosystems. Nature, 414, 169–172.
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