BACKGROUND: Many significant ecosystems, including important non-forest woody ecosystems such as the Cerrado (Brazilian savannah), are under threat from climate change, yet our understanding of how increasing temperatures will impact native vegetation remains limited. Temperature manipulation experiments are important tools for investigating such impacts, but are often constrained by access to power supply and limited to low-stature species, juvenile individuals, or heating of target organs, perhaps not fully revealing how entire or mature individuals and ecosystems will react to higher temperatures. RESULTS: We present a novel, modified open top chamber design for in situ passive heating of whole individuals up to 2.5 m tall (but easily expandable) in remote field environments with strong solar irradiance. We built multiple whole-tree heating structures (WTHSs) in an area of Cerrado around native woody species Davilla elliptica and Erythroxylum suberosum to test the design and its effects on air temperature and humidity, while also studying the physiological responses of E. suberosum to short-term heating. The WTHSs raised internal air temperature by approximately 2.5 °C above ambient during the daytime. This increased to 3.4 °C between 09:00 and 17:00 local time when thermal impact was greatest, and during which time mean internal temperatures corresponded closely with maximum ambient temperatures. Heating was consistent over time and across WTHSs of variable size and shape, and they had minimal effect on humidity. E. suberosum showed no detectable response of photosynthesis or respiration to short-term experimental heating, but some indication of acclimation to natural temperature changes. CONCLUSIONS: Our WTHSs produced a consistent and reproducible level of daytime heating in line with mid-range climate predictions for the Cerrado biome by the end of the century. The whole-tree in situ passive heating design is flexible, low-cost, simple to build using commonly available materials, and minimises negative impacts associated with passive chambers. It could be employed to investigate the high temperature responses of many understudied species in a range of complex non-forest environments with sufficient solar irradiance, providing new and important insights into the possible impacts of our changing climate.
BACKGROUND: Many significant ecosystems, including important non-forest woody ecosystems such as the Cerrado (Brazilian savannah), are under threat from climate change, yet our understanding of how increasing temperatures will impact native vegetation remains limited. Temperature manipulation experiments are important tools for investigating such impacts, but are often constrained by access to power supply and limited to low-stature species, juvenile individuals, or heating of target organs, perhaps not fully revealing how entire or mature individuals and ecosystems will react to higher temperatures. RESULTS: We present a novel, modified open top chamber design for in situ passive heating of whole individuals up to 2.5 m tall (but easily expandable) in remote field environments with strong solar irradiance. We built multiple whole-tree heating structures (WTHSs) in an area of Cerrado around native woody species Davilla elliptica and Erythroxylum suberosum to test the design and its effects on air temperature and humidity, while also studying the physiological responses of E. suberosum to short-term heating. The WTHSs raised internal air temperature by approximately 2.5 °C above ambient during the daytime. This increased to 3.4 °C between 09:00 and 17:00 local time when thermal impact was greatest, and during which time mean internal temperatures corresponded closely with maximum ambient temperatures. Heating was consistent over time and across WTHSs of variable size and shape, and they had minimal effect on humidity. E. suberosum showed no detectable response of photosynthesis or respiration to short-term experimental heating, but some indication of acclimation to natural temperature changes. CONCLUSIONS: Our WTHSs produced a consistent and reproducible level of daytime heating in line with mid-range climate predictions for the Cerrado biome by the end of the century. The whole-tree in situ passive heating design is flexible, low-cost, simple to build using commonly available materials, and minimises negative impacts associated with passive chambers. It could be employed to investigate the high temperature responses of many understudied species in a range of complex non-forest environments with sufficient solar irradiance, providing new and important insights into the possible impacts of our changing climate.
Authors: Sarah C Elmendorf; Gregory H R Henry; Robert D Hollister; Robert G Björk; Anne D Bjorkman; Terry V Callaghan; Laura Siegwart Collier; Elisabeth J Cooper; Johannes H C Cornelissen; Thomas A Day; Anna Maria Fosaa; William A Gould; Járngerður Grétarsdóttir; John Harte; Luise Hermanutz; David S Hik; Annika Hofgaard; Frith Jarrad; Ingibjörg Svala Jónsdóttir; Frida Keuper; Kari Klanderud; Julia A Klein; Saewan Koh; Gaku Kudo; Simone I Lang; Val Loewen; Jeremy L May; Joel Mercado; Anders Michelsen; Ulf Molau; Isla H Myers-Smith; Steven F Oberbauer; Sara Pieper; Eric Post; Christian Rixen; Clare H Robinson; Niels Martin Schmidt; Gaius R Shaver; Anna Stenström; Anne Tolvanen; Orjan Totland; Tiffany Troxler; Carl-Henrik Wahren; Patrick J Webber; Jeffery M Welker; Philip A Wookey Journal: Ecol Lett Date: 2011-12-05 Impact factor: 9.492
Authors: Peter B Reich; Artur Stefanski; Roy L Rich; Kerrie M Sendall; Xiaorong Wei; Changming Zhao; Jihua Hou; Rebecca A Montgomery; Raimundo Bermudez Journal: Glob Chang Biol Date: 2021-04-07 Impact factor: 10.863
Authors: Gabriel Selbach Hofmann; Manoel Ferreira Cardoso; Ruy José Válka Alves; Eliseu José Weber; Alexandre Augusto Barbosa; Peter Mann de Toledo; Francisco Boavista Pontual; Leandro de Oliveira Salles; Heinrich Hasenack; José Luís Passos Cordeiro; Francisco Eliseu Aquino; Luiz Flamarion Barbosa de Oliveira Journal: Glob Chang Biol Date: 2021-05-21 Impact factor: 10.863
Authors: David A Restrepo; Ernesto Saenz; Orlando Adolfo Jara-Muñoz; Iván F Calixto-Botía; Sioly Rodríguez-Suárez; Pablo Zuleta; Benjamin G Chavez; Juan A Sanchez; John C D'Auria Journal: Molecules Date: 2019-10-21 Impact factor: 4.411