Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Plant's biomass depends more on size, age than on climate

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 21 Jul, 2014 07:24 AM
    Plant's productivity, that is the amount of biomass it produces, depends more on its size and age than temperature and precipitation as traditionally thought, says a study.
     
    Climate has a relatively minor direct effect on net primary productivity, or the amount of biomass that plants produce by harvesting sunlight, water and carbon dioxide, the new mathematical theory shows.
     
    "This means that plants in warm, wet environments can grow more because their larger size and longer growing season enable them to capture more resources, not because climate increases the speed of their metabolism," said Sean Michaletz of University of Arizona in the US.
     
    "A fundamental assumption of our models for understanding how climate influences the functioning of ecosystems is that temperature and precipitation directly influence how fast plants can take up and use carbon dioxide," said Brian Enquist, a professor at University of Arizona in the US.
     
    To test the assumption on the scale of ecosystems, the team developed a new mathematical theory that assesses the relative importance of several hypothesised drivers of net primary productivity. This theory was then evaluated, using a massive new dataset assembled from more than 1,000 different forest locations across the world.
     
    The analysis revealed a new and general mathematical relationship that governs worldwide variation in net primary productivity in terrestrial ecosystems.
     
    "This general relationship shows that climate does not influence productivity by changing the metabolic reaction rates underlying plant growth, but instead by determining how large plants can get and how long they can live for," said Sean Michaletz, lead author of the study and a postdoctoral researcher at University of Arizona.
     
    The finding does not, however, mean that climate is unimportant for plant productivity, the researchers said.
     
    The study appeared online in the journal Nature.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    How Twitter can predict social movements in advance

    How Twitter can predict social movements in advance
    What if we can predict social movements, consumer reactions or even possible outbreaks of epidemics up to two months in advance just by monitoring 50,000 Twitter accounts?

    How Twitter can predict social movements in advance

    Beat this! Now, swap your body with another person

    Beat this! Now, swap your body with another person
    Believe it or not, living the life of your favourite star or even your pet dog is now a possibility, at least virtually, as a group of artists have now developed a project to experiment body swapping.

    Beat this! Now, swap your body with another person

    India-born Rajeev Suri named Nokia CEO

    India-born Rajeev Suri named Nokia CEO
    Finnish technology giant Nokia Tuesday named India-born Rajeev Suri as its chief executive officer (CEO).

    India-born Rajeev Suri named Nokia CEO

    New design to make batteries last for 50 years?

    New design to make batteries last for 50 years?
    If you have a pacemaker, you may no longer have to go under the knife every ten years just to replace the battery as researchers have now developed a chemistry that could extend battery life beyond what was earlier thought possible.

    New design to make batteries last for 50 years?

    Camera that lets you refocus photos after clicking them!

    Camera that lets you refocus photos after clicking them!
    Love photography? Here comes a new-age camera that allows photographers explore "living picture" - making it possible for them to refocus the photos even after taking them.

    Camera that lets you refocus photos after clicking them!

    Electric paint to fix remote control in a jiffy

    Electric paint to fix remote control in a jiffy
    You need not see red if you find your remote control broken just before the start of a match as you can now fix it just by painting it with a brush. All you need to do after that is wait for it to get dried up!

    Electric paint to fix remote control in a jiffy