Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




'Live fast, die young' true for forest too

Theallineed.com / NC&T/USGS
"One implication of this fast turnover rate is that the world¹s most productive forests may be those likely to respond most quickly to such things as climatic change," said Nate Stephenson, a USGS research ecologist in Three Rivers, Calif., and lead author of the article.

"You can view a forest like a bank account," said Stephenson. "As long as deposits and withdrawals are similar, your balance remains stable. But if the deposits or withdrawals are disrupted, the balance changes."

In productive forests, such as tropical forests growing on rich soils, the rates of both "deposits" (tree births) and "withdrawals" (tree deaths) are high. But if tree births suddenly stopped, or if tree death rates doubled, the numbers of trees in these forests would be halved in just 30 years.

In contrast, said Stephenson, in less productive forests, such as coniferous forests growing at high latitudes, the same changes could take more than a century to occur.

Another implication of the study is that environmental changes considered beneficial to forests may bring about unexpected forest changes. "Most attention so far has been given to things that stress forests, like increased drought," said USGS scientist Phil van Mantgem, the study's co-author.

"Less attention has been given to the consequences of changes that can increase forest vigor or productivity, like increased rainfall."

Coniferous forests, such as this one in California's Sierra Nevada, tend to have lower birth and death rates than other forest types (Photo: Nate Stephenson, USGS )
Environmental changes that increase productivity of a given forest could lead to more rapid turnover of trees, decreasing the average age of trees. In the long run, such changes might affect wildlife populations that prefer younger or older forests, said van Mantgem.

Stephenson and van Mantgem pointed out that increased dominance by younger trees could also lead to changes in the amount of carbon stored in forests, though the direction and magnitude of such potential changes are currently unknown and require more research. Atmospheric carbon dioxide, a heat-trapping gas implicated in climatic warming, increases as carbon storage in forests decreases, and decreases as carbon storage in forests increases. Information regarding such potential changes is therefore needed to reduce uncertainties in predicting future climatic changes.

About the Author
©2005 All rights reserved
Theallineed.com / NC&T/USGS

  Click here to see related videos
More articles
Primordial Universe
Nanomagnets technology
Football players risks
Magma chambers
Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Steadicopter
Zinc deposits
Nanoparticles cancer detection
Gibraltar macaques origin
Shortest living vertebrate
Mitosoma mitochondrion amoeba
Microbial fuel cell
Extinction ice age
Australian green-striped frog
Robotic arm stroke
Random numbers
Saturn moon Enceladus
Bacteria living computers
Sleep gene
Forests lifetime
High-speed nanowire circuits
Quotes
Friendship is born at that moment when one person says to another, What! You too? I thought I was the only one! -- C.S. Lewis

For the man who has everything. -- A sign in a Manchester shop above a display for burglar alarms

For the scientific acquisition of knowledge is almost as tedious as the routine acquisition of wealth. — Eric Linklater (1899-1974)


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info

 
© Lexur