The use of stored carbon is essential for new organ development in deciduous trees during early spring. However, the contribution of carbon to the development of new organs in early spring of subsequent years is not well understood. Using a C labelling approach, we investigated the reallocation of assimilated carbon into new aboveground organs on apple (Malus domestica) saplings in the following two years. Eight three-year-old potted saplings were exposed to CO in an exposure chamber on each of eight different dates during the growth season. Some of the trees were harvested in the late autumn of the same year. The remaining trees were transferred to a field and cultivated during the two following growing seasons. We directly showed that the assimilated C was used to develop terminal and flower buds for two consecutive years after labelling. The proportions of the concentration of C remobilized to the terminal and flower buds in the second year were 5 and 24% of those in the first year after labelling, respectively. The concentration of assimilated C was higher in the terminal buds than in the flower buds in the first year after the labelling, while opposite results were found in the second year. This study demonstrates that the stored carbon used for the development of new organs was a mixture of recent- and old-stored carbon and indicates that recently-stored carbon was preferentially used to develop new organs. We also indicated that the stored carbon was remobilized to flower buds during development.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.70077 | DOI Listing |
Ecology
January 2025
Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Temperate streams are subsidized by inputs of leaf litter peaking in fall. Yet, stream communities decompose dead leaves and integrate their energy into the aquatic food web throughout the whole year. Most studies investigating stream decomposition largely overlook long-term trajectories, which must be understood for an appropriate temporal upscaling of ecosystem processes.
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January 2025
Department of Radioecology, Institute for Environmental Sciences, Aomori, Japan.
The use of stored carbon is essential for new organ development in deciduous trees during early spring. However, the contribution of carbon to the development of new organs in early spring of subsequent years is not well understood. Using a C labelling approach, we investigated the reallocation of assimilated carbon into new aboveground organs on apple (Malus domestica) saplings in the following two years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
January 2025
Division of Life Sciences, Korea Polar Research Institute, Incheon, 21990, Republic of Korea.
Permafrost soils store vast amounts of organic carbon, and their thawing due to climate warming accelerates the release of carbon as methane and carbon dioxide, exacerbating global climate change. Understanding the distribution of greenhouse gases trapped in these soils and predicting their behavior upon thawing is essential for accurately modeling climate feedbacks. This study presents an integrated biogeochemical and microbial dataset from ~1.
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November 2024
Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, Waltham, MA 02453, USA.
We introduce donor-acceptor substituted anthracenes as effective molecular solar thermal energy storage compounds that operate exclusively in the solid state. The donor-acceptor anthracenes undergo visible light-induced [4+4] cycloaddition reaction, producing metastable cycloadducts, dianthracenes with quaternary carbons, and storing photon energy. The triggered cycloreversion of dianthracenes to anthracenes discharges the stored energy as heat in the order of 100 kJ/mol (200 J/g).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Mater
January 2025
School of Chemistry, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
The electrocatalytic synthesis of multicarbon compounds from CO is a promising method for storing renewable electricity and addressing global CO issues. Single-atom catalysts are promising candidates for CO reduction, but producing high-value multicarbon (C) products using a single-atom structure remains a significant challenge. In this study, a fluorine doping strategy is proposed to facilitate the reconstruction of isolated Cu atoms, promoting multicarbon generation.
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