Combining LTER sites (as this group of grads and postdocs did) -> even more powerful insights.
Multiple Community Properties Drive Ecosystem Resistance and Resilience to Extreme Climate Events Across Mesic Grasslands - Ajowele - 2026 - Ecology Letters onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
Latest Posts by Seth Munson
🌱 Subordinate grassland species enhance drought resistance by increasing belowground C allocation and N uptake, influencing microbial activity and soil functions 👉️ buff.ly/aXPsAfj
Our new synthesis compares how 7 dominant #invasive grass species influence #wildfire and which treatments are effective to mitigate risk across the Intermountain West USA
🌾🌾🌾 🔥🔥🔥🔥
doi.org/10.1017/inp....
“Critics raised alarm over the proposal to consolidate research stations while much of the Western United States is suffering from record temperatures and prolonged drought that increase the risk of wildfires this summer.” www.nytimes.com/2026/04/03/c...
Check out the new issue of ECOSYSTEMS, great studies in ecosystem ecology across a wide range of systems and scales. We welcome your manuscripts! Top-notch editorial board, quality reviews, timely publication. @steve-carpenter.bsky.social @springernature.com
link.springer.com/journal/1002...
Really nice article and visuals in @washingtonpost.com this morning showing how spring has arrived early - very early - in much of the lower 48 states
www.washingtonpost.com/weather/inte...
@usa-npn.bsky.social #phenology @bennollweather.bsky.social
For more than 15 years, botanist Naomi Fraga has been trying to collect seeds from the rare Death Valley sage, for safekeeping in a vault of native California seeds. n.pr/4ttOsq4
☀️This dryland study unveils diverse drought resistance strategies in annuals and shows that in open areas, more drought-resistant populations are more stable over time. Under extreme aridity, delayed germination emerges as a key driver of stability
🔍Article: buff.ly/PvhqEXD
📰 Blog: buff.ly/gh2nJNq
🌱 From Nature Ecology & Evolution: Traits that aid short drought survival vary by growth form and lifespan, showing no universal plant strategy for resisting extreme dry spells. (Samantha J. Worthy, Jennifer L. Funk)
▶️ www.nature.com/articles/s41...
#PlantScience #Climate
Drylands are globally resistant to invasive species!
Native biodiversity and aridity are key but increasing grazing pressure and eutrophication may change the game 🌐
Our new paper is here @natecoevo.nature.com
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
👀 Global maps of 37 plant #FunctionalTraits as defined in the TRY Plant Trait Database with a resolution of 1 km and a global extent 🌐🧪 📏🧮🌮 global-traits.projects.earthengine.app/view/global-...
New paper from lab-@natecoevo.nature.com
Abiotic and biotic controls of non-native perennial plant success in drylands
Non-native plant success in drylands is facilitated by high grazing pressure & resource availability.
Led by Rahmanian and @ftmaestre.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
USFS land on the left, City of Flagstaff on the right.
The position applies subject-matter expertise in restoration ecology, forest and fire ecology, and wildfire risk reduction to advance proactive, landscape-scale restoration, fuels management, and conservation in frequent-fire forests and woodlands of the Intermountain West.
Our new paper out on how desert annual plants, which make up ~50% of diversity, respond to large scale solar energy development. Native annual plant diversity can increase with more microclimate heterogeneity in low-impact facilities
#ecovoltaics
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
One of the graphics of the paper on Anthyllis cytisoides resprouiting after drought, showing model predictions and observations of the data analysed in 2022 and 2023; fire occurred in 2021. For flowering and fruiting, the negative effects of drought are stronger on unburned plants (A and C). Burned plants produced nearly four times more flowers than unburned plants (B), and had a higher seed set and heavier seeds than unburned plants in both years (D and E).
Fire buffers drought impacts on reproduction in a resprouting shrub
nsojournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Under drought, burned plants had ⬆️prob. of flowering, produced +flowers, set +seeds & heavier seeds, than unburned
Saiz-Blanco et al @oikosjournal.bsky.social
🧪🌍🔥🌿🪴🌾🌱 Anthyllis
How many STEM Ph.D.s were lost from the U.S. federal government last year?
My colleagues @mghersher.bsky.social and @policyhound.bsky.social dug into a recent data release to find the answer. A @science.org exclusive.
www.science.org/content/arti...
Grazing is a major land use in drylands with major impact on ecosystems
In a new paper, we found that plant diversity is key to increase ecosystem resistance to increasing grazing pressure. This effect is driven by complementarity in plant traits
🧪🌐
Find more here⬇️
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
📖 Published!
Seed germination traits of native temperate European herbs predict naturalization success in different climatic zones, offering a simple but effective tool for assessing naturalization risk globally 🌱 🌳
🔎 Read more: buff.ly/O2S2Hfd
Similar results in the Mojave Desert, although elevated moisture levels likely due to shading
bsky.app/profile/smmu...
You probably heard the US admin is threatening to break up the National Center for Atmospheric Research: but did you know they already froze funding for the 9 regional Climate Science Adaptation Centers? From tracking invasives to helping tribes with drought, here's why the CASCs matter ⬇️
Conceptual diagram illustrating how climate influences stomatal traits and drought responses in Andropogon gerardii. The top panel compares populations: warm, dry environments are shown with leaves having smaller, more numerous stomata to reduce water loss, while cool, moist environments have leaves with larger, fewer stomata that enhance transpiration. The bottom panel depicts drought responses: dry-adapted populations maintain similar stomatal traits and continue carbon gain (drought tolerant), whereas wet-adapted populations show pronounced stomatal closure or reduction in size and density, leading to lower photosynthesis (drought susceptible).
Intraspecific variation in stomatal architecture, gas exchange, & #drought response of a dominant #prairie #grass sourced from broad climatic gradients
New #AJB research by @j-sytsma-56.bsky.social, Allison Ricker, Helen Winters, Brian Maricle et al.
doi.org/10.1002/ajb2... #botany #plantscience
How does a solar energy facility built with low disturbance methods affect microclimate?
We found lower evaporative demand, less heat loading, and higher soil moisture inside compared to outside the facility, potentially benefitting desert flora and fauna
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Thanks for covering this. Many U.S. fed scientists have strict travel caps or are not receiving approval to attend
“Notably, desert species had the most cold and heat tolerant leaves, and therefore the widest thermal tolerance breadth”
Cycad plants use thermogenesis to warm their reproductive cones. A beetle dusted with pollen and fluorescent dyes lands on the warm cone of a cycad. High concentrations of dye have been deposited on the cone’s hottest regions during previous visits by other labeled beetles. Beetle pollinators use these thermal infrared patterns as a guide to locate host pollen and ovulate cones.
Long before flowers dazzled pollinators with brilliant colors and sweet scents, ancient plants used another feature to signal insects: heat. The findings in Science offer insights into what shaped the earliest eras of plant-animal coevolution.
Read more in this week's issue: https://scim.ag/4rVtArQ
I started getting reports of an unseasonal Joshua tree bloom in the last few weeks, and looking over records on @inaturalist.bsky.social it's pretty widespread! So we're putting out the call for folks to record this "bonus bloom" and help us study it 🌿
lab.jbyoder.org/2025/12/10/w...
This paper was led by two top-notch early career researchers Laura Shriver and Sarah Costanzo