Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Tuesday July 05 2016, @02:17PM   Printer-friendly
from the are-males-moving-up-or-are-females-coming-down? dept.

Rapidly changing ratios of the sexes of valerian plants could be a quick sign of climate change. Science News reports that researchers have found that in Colorado's Rocky Mountains, male and female valerian plants have responded differently to hotter, drier conditions.

Valerian (Valeriana edulis) plants range from hot, scrubby lowlands to cold alpine slopes. In each patch of plants, some are male and some are female. The exact proportion of each sex varies with elevation. High on the mountain, females are much more common than males; they can make up 80 percent of some populations.

Four decades ago, in patches of valerian growing in the middle of the plant's elevation range, 33.4 percent of the plants were males. Those patches grew in the Rockies at elevations around 3,000 meters. Today, you would have to hike considerably higher to find the same proportion of male plants. Males, now 5.5 percent more common on average, are reaching higher elevations than in the past, researchers report in the July 1 Science.

"We think climate is acting almost like a filter on males and females," says Will Petry of ETH Zurich, who led the study while at the University of California, Irvine. "The settings on this filter are controlling the sex ratio." Those settings are sweeping up the mountainside like a rising tide at a rate of 175 meters per decade, Petry and colleagues found.

[...] Those moving sex ratios have kept pace with climate change since the late 1970s. Today, winter snows are melting earlier and summers are hotter, with less rain. As a result, the same amount of precipitation that would have fallen at one elevation in 1978 now falls at higher elevations instead; it has moved upslope by 133 meters per decade. Soil moisture has moved up the mountain, too, by 195 meters per decade.


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 1) by gOnZo on Tuesday July 05 2016, @10:36PM

    by gOnZo (5184) on Tuesday July 05 2016, @10:36PM (#370329)

    ...or WHY is it that females are more likely to find lounging on a sizzling beach appealing, and males are more likely to be found in an air conditioned bar, sipping chilled suds?