Publications by authors named "Ina Christin Meier"

Global warming and associated decreases in summer rainfall may threaten tree vitality and forest productivity in many regions of the temperate zone in the future. One option for forestry to reduce the risk of failure is to plant genotypes which combine high productivity with drought tolerance. Growth experiments with provenances from different climates indicate that drought exposure can trigger adaptive drought responses in temperate trees, but it is not well known whether and to what extent regional precipitation reduction can increase the drought resistance of a species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rapidly decreasing water availability as a consequence of climate change is likely to endanger the range of long-lived tree species. A pressing question is, therefore, whether adaptation to drought exists in important temperate tree species like European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.), a wide-spread, dominant forest tree in Central Europe.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Recent studies show that plants can adapt their root growth to minimize competition with their own roots, but the underlying physiological changes are not well understood.
  • In this study on pea plants, researchers examined how the identity of neighboring roots (same plant vs. different plants) affected gas exchange, biomass, photosynthesis, and respiration.
  • Results revealed that while photosynthesis remained unchanged by root identity, plants with non-self neighbors experienced a significant reduction in leaf respiration and an increase in nighttime root respiration, suggesting altered carbon dynamics in response to competition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF