最新天美传媒

最新天美传媒

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Trees have an overwhelming biomass on Earth and play a significant role in nearly every ecosystem. (Photo courtesy of Adobe Stock)

Trees have an overwhelming biomass on Earth and play a significant role in nearly every ecosystem. (Photo courtesy of Adobe Stock)

What the trees are telling us: USF professor uses data to identify threats to tree diversity

By Kellie Britch, College of Arts and Sciences

Maitner鈥檚 latest paper was recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS).

Maitner鈥檚 latest paper was recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS).

Brian Maitner, an assistant professor in the Department of Integrative Biology, is revolutionizing the way researchers examine and predict the impact of environmental shifts on plant diversity. His work will ultimately give decision-makers the necessary information to preserve one of the world鈥檚 most valuable resources: trees. 
 
鈥淭rees are perhaps some of the most important organisms on the planet,鈥 said Maitner. 鈥淭hey really drive things like climate carbon sequestration and the local climate structure for animals. For humans, they provide endless physical and cultural value.  
 
鈥淭rees provide oxygen and food, stabilize the soil, protecting areas against flooding, give us building materials and significantly impact mental health.鈥 
 
Long-term changes to global temperatures and an increase in land development force living things, such as trees, to adapt, migrate or face extinction. By studying a tree鈥檚 characteristics and history, researchers like Maitner hope to learn how to save them. 
 
Maitner is working with a team of interdisciplinary collaborators from around the world to map the ranges of tree species globally and predict their long-term health. By using a technique called exposure modeling, the team is able to map the historical conditions experienced by various species of trees. 

Maitner and his collaborators use maps like this to gauge the potential number of tree species that could be impacted by environmental changes in a given area. (Image courtesy of Brian Maitner)

Maitner and his collaborators use maps like this to gauge the potential number of tree species that could be impacted by environmental changes in a given area. (Image courtesy of Brian Maitner)

Unlike other exposure models that focus on isolated things like temperature or rain fall, Maitner鈥檚 model uses the K枚ppen-Geiger climate classification system to track more significant environmental changes.

鈥淜枚ppen-Geiger climate zones are basically ways of splitting the environment into major climate areas,鈥 explained Maitner. 鈥淔or example, is it a temperate region or a tropical region? Is it a desert? Is it tundra? These high-level categories correspond with boundaries for different types of ecosystems and the extent of where different plants can live.鈥
 
Being exposed to a new climate zone signifies a potentially major shift that could threaten the survival of a tree species.  
 
鈥淲hen you see that something like 80 percent of tree species in some areas are going to be exposed to a whole new climate zone by the end of the century, that's actually quite alarming,鈥 said Maitner. 鈥淭hat means, for example, all these species that thrive in temperate regions are going to be moving into a tropical climate, and we have no evidence that they can actually survive in those conditions.鈥 
 
Maitner鈥檚 models allow researchers to differentiate between regions that are relatively stable and areas where most species will be exposed to a new climate.
 
鈥淭hat allows us to target regions where we might need to think about how we can manage things differently,鈥 said Maitner. 鈥淔or areas that aren't changing, we might consider making it an area we want to protect because it could serve as a refuge. This gives us the chance to open up different management scenarios, and it allows decision makers to potentially make more informed choices.鈥
 
This data also presents interesting opportunities for biologists, specifically graduate students, to visit the areas with increased exposure and perform experiments on the species that could be exposed to new, potentially threatening, conditions.
 
Learn more about Maitner鈥檚 .

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