Kalgoorlie plant life. Plants growing in inner regions of Australia are at high risk from heat-waves. Image credit: Owen Atkin.
Kalgoorlie plant life. Plants growing in inner regions of Australia are at high risk from heat-waves. Image credit: Owen Atkin.

EXPERT REACTION: Future heat-waves a threat to Aussie plant life

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Future heat-waves could have devastating effects on Australia’s flora. A global study of heat tolerance in plants has found that, across much of inland Australia, plant life is near a tipping point in its ability to cope with rising temperatures. Extreme heat-wave events, predicted to increase in intensity with climate change, could have devastating effects on natural plant populations and ecosystems. The findings of the study also have important implications for farmers growing crops in hot, inland regions of Australia.

Journal/conference: Global Change Biology

Organisation/s: ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology

Funder: Australian Research Council, Natural Environment Research Council, USA National Science Foundation , U.S. Department of Energy , National Institute for Climatic Change Research, Texas AgriLife Research.

Media Release

From: ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology

FUTURE HEAT-WAVES A THREAT TO AUSSIE PLANT LIFE

It may not feel like it in Australia right now, but over the past year we’ve experienced the hottest global temperatures on instrumental record. This could spell bad news for Australia’s plants.

A study, published in the journal Global Change Biology, has found that across much of inland Australia plants are near a tipping point in their ability to cope with rising high-temperature extremes. This suggests that future heat-waves could have devastating effects on Australia’s flora.

“We surveyed plant life around the globe for their high-temperature tolerance,” said Professor Owen Atkin of the ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology at the Australian National University, who led the study.

“We show that, while heat tolerance is higher in plants near the equator than in the arctic, the potential for damage is most severe for hot, inland, mid-latitude regions. Here, maximum air temperatures during heat-waves are most extreme”.

“Plants growing in the dry, inner regions of Australia are at particularly high risk. We could see dramatic changes to the face of Aussie plant life in the future”.

The international team of researchers looked at plants from habitats all over the world, including nineteen remote sites in the arctic, tropics and deserts. The study is the most comprehensive analysis of heat tolerance in plants to date.

By exposing leaves to increasing temperatures during controlled tests, the researchers were able to pinpoint the exact temperatures where leaf metabolism becomes damaged by heat. They found that two critical processes for plant growth and survival, namely photosynthesis and leaf respiration, were damaged by high-temperature extremes.

“The study suggests high temperatures during heat waves will damage a plant’s ability to function, particularly in sun-exposed, upper canopy leaves” said lead author Dr Odhran O’Sullivan.

“This means extreme heat-wave events, predicted to increase in intensity with climate change, could have devastating effects on natural plant populations and ecosystems, and the latitudes at risk will likely expand in the long term”

Co-author Professor Mark Tjoelker of the Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment at Western Sydney University said “the potential for high-temperature heat-damage is greatest during periods of drought, when plants are unable to use water to naturally cool leaves”.

The findings of the study also have important implications for farmers growing crops in hot, inland regions of Australia.

“We know that crop yields are negatively affected by heat-waves, often when crops are flowering. Our results point towards heat damage to leaves being a further factor contributing to reduced crop yields. The potential for such damage will only increase as global temperatures rise” said Prof. Atkin.

“Because heat-waves are becoming more extreme and frequent, there is an urgent need to improve heat tolerance of leaf metabolism in crops, such as wheat, that are often grown in hot, arid regions”.

With funding from the ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology and the Grains Research Development Corporation (GRDC) in Australia, researchers are now using the results of the study to identify wheat varieties capable of better handling heat stress.

The study was performed by an international collaboration of researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology at ANU, Western Sydney University, and several leading institutions in the USA, UK, Sweden and New Zealand.

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Expert Reaction

These comments have been collated by the Science Media Centre to provide a variety of expert perspectives on this issue. Feel free to use these quotes in your stories. Views expressed are the personal opinions of the experts named. They do not represent the views of the SMC or any other organisation unless specifically stated.

Professor Justin Borevitz is a Chief Investigator at the ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology's ANU node, and is the Leader of the Australian Plant Phenomics Facility's High Resolution Plant Phenomcis Centre ANU node.

We congratulate O’Sullivan et al. on their important new study on global variation in plant high temperature heat tolerance. They show the limits of acclimation in plant respiration are substantial but relatively less in tropical regions. A diversity of plants will struggle physiologically under more extreme temperatures from an unstable climate. Indeed they may suffer even before reaching these limits from droughts, fire and/or flooding that also comes with an unstable climate, if deforestation is avoided. Healthy plants and ecosystems are a big part of reducing CO2. Understanding their temperature limits sets a hard bound nature's resilience not to be crossed.

Last updated: 03 Nov 2016 7:48pm

Professor Robert Furbank is Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Translational Photosynthesis at the Australian National University

Understanding plant adaptation to temperature extremes is pivotal for us to model and plan for the impacts of climate change. Studies of how photosynthesis and respiration respond to temperature across the globe and the likely impact of extreme temperatures on these important plant processes are rare. This is a pivotal paper which paints a gloomy picture for our global flora if the magnitude of extreme weather events increases substantively.

Last updated: 03 Nov 2016 7:07pm
Professor Mark G Tjoelker is the Theme Leader for Ecosystem Function & Integration at the Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment at Western Sydney University and is an author of the study

This study represents the most comprehensive survey of plant species’ ability to cope with high-temperature extremes. We studied plants across the globe, visiting field sites ranging from the arctic to the tropics. We determined the exact temperatures where leaf metabolism is damaged by heat.
 
Though we found that tropical plants are better able to tolerate high temperature extremes than temperate or arctic plants, we were surprised to discover that plants growing in temperate climates of the mid-latitudes were closest to the tipping-point in their ability to tolerate high temperature extremes experienced during heat waves. Sun exposed upper canopy leaves and plants experiencing drought stress are particularly vulnerable to high temperature damage during heat waves.

This means that as heat waves become more extreme in the future, the safety margin for high temperature tolerance will shrink first and most quickly for plants in the mid-latitudes. This includes vital agricultural crop-growing regions. In Australia, plants growing in dry inner regions may be at most risk for damage with increases in high temperature extremes expected with climate change.

Last updated: 03 Nov 2016 4:04pm

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