麻豆淫院

March 25, 2013

Germination of alpines: Climate change could shift the timing of seed germination in alpine plants

Andrea Mondoni monitoring seedling emergence at 2,500 m in the moraine of the glacier Dosd茅, Lombardy Alps, Italy.
× close
Andrea Mondoni monitoring seedling emergence at 2,500 m in the moraine of the glacier Dosd茅, Lombardy Alps, Italy.

Millennium Seed Bank Partnership scientists at the Lombardy Seed Bank (University of Pavia, Italy) and Wakehurst Place (RBG Kew) are engaged in studies to understand better the impact of climate warming on the reproductive success of alpine plants.

The phenology of in eight alpine species has been investigated by simulating monthly changes in temperature recorded at the glacial foreland and at an elevation 400 m lower to reflect the temperatures these plants would face if the climate warmed by 2.6掳C (a conservative estimate of the likely increase in temperature during the 21st century). Previous studies have tended to focus on the effect on germination of warmer springs and summers because most are adapted for spring germination. This study focused on the impact of warmer autumns.

The results, published in Annals of Botany, revealed for the first time that may result in a shift from spring to autumn germination. This shift means that seedlings could be more vulnerable to frost damage during the winter and may explain why plant populations tend to migrate upwards as the climate warms. As conditions at the leading edge become more favourable for seedling recruitment and survival, conditions at the trailing edge become less so.

Current experiments monitoring seedling emergence and mortality in the field will test this hypothesis.

Journal information: Annals of Botany

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.