Skip to main content

AI Bias Analysis

4 models · Takes ~15 seconds

Phys.org

Just a few species can drive a plant community's response to warming temperatures

Just a few species can drive a plant community's response to warming temperatures
ShareXFacebook

A new analysis of experimental data led by the University of Michigan has unveiled insights into why and how plant communities are changing their makeup to survive in warmer temperatures. Thanks to field studies of plant communities in nature, scientists had previously established that plant species that prefer warmth are becoming more abundant, while those that prefer cooler temperatures are wani

P

Source

Phys.org

Read full article at Phys.org

Opens original article in a new tab

Advertisement

Related Science Stories

Beer waste may become sunscreen ingredient after spent hops show promising UV protection
Phys.org

Beer waste may become sunscreen ingredient after spent hops show promising UV protection

Research conducted at the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil revealed that hops (Humulus lupulus L.) industrial waste from the brewing industry is a viable option for sunscreen formulation production. The multidisciplinary study, which involved researchers from USP's School of Pharmaceutical Sciences (FCF), was inspired by the large amount of waste generated and discarded during beer production. The study brought together complementary expertise in natural products and bioactive photoprotec

Read more →
Blooming surprise in upstate New York reveals first new flowering plant species in nearly ten years
Phys.org

Blooming surprise in upstate New York reveals first new flowering plant species in nearly ten years

Justin Scholten '22 knows the plants growing on the forest floor around the Finger Lakes. There's the white baneberry, Actaea pachypoda and the red baneberry, Actaea rubra. Both are about 30–70 centimeters tall, herbaceous and extremely toxic to humans. But in 2023 as he hiked through Summer Hill State Forest, less than 30 miles northeast of Ithaca, he noticed an oddity: a pink baneberry.

Read more →
Advertisement