The University of Montana

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IN VISION:
Letter from the Publisher T. Lloyd Chesnut discusses UM's research accomplishments

Priming the Pump UM research and development help fuel Montana's economy

Related: UM Research and the Economy

When Gardening Really Is Rocket Science NASA satellite uses UM-designed software to monitor Earth and its oceans

Related: UM Satellite Study Shows Increased Plant Growth

Helping Hospitals Multistate partnership works to improve quality of health care in rural communities

Leading Information New undergraduate degree program merges clinical health care and information technology

Excellence on the Air Montana Public Radio and PBS bring award-winning programs to Big Sky Country

Core of Discovery UM focuses on Lewis and Clark

Animal Advocate Veterinarian monitors quality of animal research at UM

Breathing Easier Professor's program puts UM at the forefront of research on asbestos-related diseases

Keep Tobacco Sacred Tobacco-abuse prevention project brings culturally relevant message to state's American Indian reservation schools

Hot Topic Mansfield Pacific Retreat draws international VIPs to discuss climate change

Cool Idea College of Technology paves way for hydrogen energy revolution

President Dennison's Warhol

DEPARTMENTS:
Profile UM junior Amanda Ng explores B. burgdorferi

News to Use Exercise expert encourages public health awareness

A Closer Look Briefs

Back Talk UM researcher earns highest U.S. honor for young scientists

 



UM SATELLITE STUDY SHOWS
INCREASED PLANT GROWTH

Infrared image of the North American continent.
This image from the Terra satellite shows North American plant growth in late fall 2001.

A NASA-funded study directed by UM finds that changing rainfall patterns over much of the United States in the last century have allowed plants to grow more vigorously and absorb more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

In the presence of water and sunlight, plants take in carbon dioxide (CO2) during photosynthesis to create fuel, glucose and other sugars, as well as build plant structures. Better understanding of biological and physical processes that contribute to carbon uptake by plants will help scientists predict climate change and future levels of CO2, a heat-trapping gas in the atmosphere.

“The changes in the hydrologic cycle are a mechanism often overlooked in the recent debate over carbon sequestration in the United States,” says Ramakrishna Nemani, a researcher at the UM School of Forestry and lead author of the study, which appeared in an issue of Geophysical Research Letters earlier this year.

Scientists have noticed that the U.S. terrestrial sink, an effect where carbon is drained from the air and stored in the land, has been increasing since the latter part of the 20th century. Previous research has claimed this rise may be due to an observed greening of the United States as a result of forest regrowth, as well as greater concentrations of atmospheric CO2 and warming temperatures.

For the first time, however, this study suggests that changing rainfall patterns may play a bigger role in plant growth and carbon absorption. Computer model results show that on average from 1950 to 1993 higher humidity combined with an 8 percent increase in precipitation has led to a 14 percent increase in plant growth in the United States. Data over that time period also show increases in cloud cover, minimum temperatures, soil moisture and stream flows, all of which are signs of a changing hydrologic cycle.

Whether or not shifting rainfall patterns result in a positive uptake of carbon by land ecosystems depends on complex interactions that include plant physiology and both the magnitude and timing of changes that impact the water cycle.

Between 1950 and 1993, minimum temperatures in the spring generally have become warmer and autumns generally have been wetter, which has combined to lengthen the growing season for plants. A longer growing season means plants pull carbon from the air for a greater period of time. In addition, the magnitude of precipitation on average has gone up in the conterminous United States, except over the Pacific Northwest.

“Most people only think of the idea that more water means more growth, but really plants benefit from more water in a number of ways,” says Steven Running, a UM forestry professor and co-author of the study.

When the air is wetter, plants can open special cells in their leaves without losing much water to the air, increasing CO2 uptake while reducing the amount of water needed to grow. Additionally, wetter soils promote decomposition of dead plant materials, releasing nutrients needed for plant growth. Also, higher humidity in the spring helps maintain higher night temperatures, which makes for more frost-free days and lengthens the growing season.

The authors found that without enhanced rainfall and humidity, CO2 increases and temperature changes have a lesser effect on plant growth.

Greenhouse gases warm the air, and warmer air can hold more water, which impacts the hydrologic cycle. Changes in the cycle may mean more rainfall in some regions and less in other places, affecting plant growth and carbon absorption, which in turn affects future concentrations of greenhouse gases, Nemani says.

The study was funded by the Vegetation Ecosystem Modeling and Analysis Project and the Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer science team, which are part of NASA’s Earth Science Enterprise. V

—NASA

 

Cary Shimek, Managing Editor
Judy Fredenberg, Office of the Vice President for Research and Development
The University of Montana-Missoula
32 Campus Drive | Missoula, MT 59812
phone 406-243-2522 | fax 406-243-4520
Copyright 2007 The University of Montana

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