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PORTLAND, Ore. January 11, 2010. The opening
of buds on Douglas-fir trees each spring is the result of a complex
interplay between cold and warm temperatures during the winter,
scientists with the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest
Research Station have found.
Their research—which is featured in the December issue of
Science Findings, a monthly publication of the station—led
to the development of a novel model to help managers predict budburst
under different scenarios of future climate.
“
We take it for granted that buds will open each spring, but, in
spite of a lot of research on winter dormancy in plants, we don’t
really understand how the plants are sensing and remembering temperatures,” said
Connie Harrington, research forester and the study’s lead. “The
timing of budburst is crucial because, if it occurs prematurely,
the new growth may be killed by subsequent frosts, and if it occurs
too late, growth will be reduced by summer drought.”
Although
scientists have long recognized that some plants require a certain
amount of exposure to cold temperatures in the winter
and warm temperatures in the spring to initiate the opening of
buds, the precise interaction between these chilling and forcing
requirements has, until now, been largely unexplored. Harrington
and her station colleagues Peter Gould and Brad St Clair addressed
this knowledge gap, which has implications for forecasting the
effects of climate change on plants, by conducting greenhouse experiments
in Washington and Oregon using Douglas-fir, an ecologically and
economically important species.
For their experiments, the researchers
exposed Douglas-fir seedlings from 59 areas in western Oregon,
western Washington, and northern
California to a range of winter conditions. After the seedlings
finished their first year of growth, they were divided into groups
and placed in different locations where their exposure to temperatures
varied according to predetermined scenarios. In the spring, the
scientists monitored the seedlings and documented the length of
time it took for their buds to open.
“
We found that, beyond a minimum required level of chilling, many
different combinations of temperatures resulted in spring budburst,” Harrington
said. “Plants exposed to fewer hours of optimal chilling
temperatures needed more hours of warmth to burst bud, whereas
those exposed to many hours of chilling required fewer hours of
warm temperatures for bud burst.”
The plants were responding,
the researchers found, to both warm and cold temperatures they
experienced during the winter and spring.
And, they noted that the same temperatures can have different effects
depending on how often they occur—a fact that may seem counterintuitive
at first. While some winter warming may hasten spring budburst,
substantial periods of mid-winter warming, such as is projected
under several future climate scenarios, may actually delay, not
promote, normal budburst.
Harrington and her colleagues used their
findings and research results from other species to develop a
novel model that depicts
this gradual tradeoff between chilling and forcing temperatures
and have verified its accuracy using historical records. They
found that the model was fairly accurate in predicting past budburst
in Douglas-fir plantations, which indicates it works well with
real-world conditions.
Because the model is based on biological
relationships between plants and temperature, the researchers
expect it will be fairly
straightforward to modify for use with other species and for
other areas. Managers, for example, could use the model to
predict changes
in budburst for a wide range of climatic projections and then
evaluate the information to determine if selecting a different
species to
plant or stock from a different seed zone would be a useful
management strategy.
To read the December issue of Science Findings online,
visit http://www.treesearch.fs.fed.us/pubs/36960.
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The Pacific Northwest Research Station is headquartered in
Portland, Oregon. It has 11 laboratories and centers in Alaska,
Oregon,
and Washington.
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