Saturday, September 4, 2010
More CO2 means more poison ivy
Seed Daily: Rising carbon dioxide in the atmosphere may threaten climate change and be bad news for humans but poison ivy likes it, U.S. researchers say. A report in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives last year said the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has grown by 22 percent since 1960, not so good for humans but great for poison ivy and other vines, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.
In a study in Durham, N.C., a researcher simulated the carbon dioxide content in the air 50 years ago, today and -- using projections -- for the year 2050. "Tree seedlings grew 8 (percent) to 12 percent more, with more C02," Jacqueline Mohan, an assistant professor at the University of Georgia, said. "Poison ivy grew 149 percent more. Poison ivy is getting bigger, faster and nastier."
Plants survive by converting carbon dioxide into carbohydrates through sunlight-fueled photosynthesis. "Vines are particularly adapted to take advantage of higher CO2 in the atmosphere," Mohan said, since they "can increase their rate of photosynthesis to make more green leafy tissue," which allows them to grow more and put out even more leafy tissue….
Poison ivy leaves, shot by Stilfehler, Wikimedia Commons, under the Creative Commons3.0 Unported
In a study in Durham, N.C., a researcher simulated the carbon dioxide content in the air 50 years ago, today and -- using projections -- for the year 2050. "Tree seedlings grew 8 (percent) to 12 percent more, with more C02," Jacqueline Mohan, an assistant professor at the University of Georgia, said. "Poison ivy grew 149 percent more. Poison ivy is getting bigger, faster and nastier."
Plants survive by converting carbon dioxide into carbohydrates through sunlight-fueled photosynthesis. "Vines are particularly adapted to take advantage of higher CO2 in the atmosphere," Mohan said, since they "can increase their rate of photosynthesis to make more green leafy tissue," which allows them to grow more and put out even more leafy tissue….
Poison ivy leaves, shot by Stilfehler, Wikimedia Commons, under the Creative Commons3.0 Unported
Labels:
atmosphere,
pests,
plants,
science
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