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Plant Physiological Ecology SecondEdition HansLambers F. Stuart Chapin III Thijs L. Pons Plant Physiological Ecology SecondEdition 13 HansLambers F. Stuart Chapin III TheUniversity of Western Australia University of Alaska Crawley, WA Fairbanks, AK Australia USA hans.lambers@uwa.edu.au terry.chapin@uaf.edu Thijs L. Pons Utrecht University TheNetherlands T.L.Pons@bio.uu.nl ISBN: 978-0-387-78340-6 e-ISBN: 978-0-387-78341-3 DOI:10.1007/978-0-387-78341-3 Library of Congress Control Number: 2008931587 #2008SpringerScienceþBusinessMedia,LLC All rights reserved. This work may not be translated or copied in whole or in part without the written permission of the publisher(SpringerScienceþBusinessMedia,LLC,233SpringStreet,NewYork,NY10013,USA),exceptforbriefexcerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis. Use in connection with any form of information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafterdeveloped is forbidden. Theuseinthispublicationoftradenames,trademarks,servicemarks,andsimilarterms,eveniftheyarenotidentifiedas such, is not to be taken as an expression of opinion as to whether or not they are subject to proprietary rights. Printed on acid-free paper springer.com ForewordtoSecondEdition Inthedecadethathaspassedsincethefirsteditionofthisbook,theglobalenviron- menthaschangedrapidly.Eventhemoststeadfast‘‘deny-ers’’havecometoaccept that atmospheric CO enrichment and global warming pose serious challenges to 2 life on Earth. Regrettably, this acceptance has been forced by calamitous events rather than by the long-standing, sober warnings of the scientific community. There seems to be growing belief that ‘‘technology’’ will save us from the worst consequencesofawarmerplanetanditswaywardweather.Thishope,thatmayin the end prove to be no more than wishful thinking, relates principally to the built environmentandhumanaffairs.Alternativesourcesofenergy,utilizedwithgreater efficiency,areattheheartofsuchhopes;evenalternativewaysofproducingfoodor obtaining water may be possible. For plants, however, there is no alternative but to utilize sunlight and fix carbon and to draw water from the soil. (Under a given rangeofenvironmentalconditions,theseprocessesarealreadyremarkablyefficient by industrial standards.) Can we ‘‘technologize’’ our way out of the problems that plants may encounter in capricious, stormier, hotter, drier, or more saline environ- ments?Climatechangewillnotalterthebasicnatureofthestressesthatplantsmust endure, but it will result in their occurrence in places where formerly their impact wassmall, thus exposing species and vegetation types to more intense episodes of stressthantheyareabletohandle.Thetimescaleonwhichtheclimateischangingis too fast to wait for evolution to come up with solutions to the problems. For a variety of reasons, the prospects for managing change seem better in agriculture than in forests or in wild plant communities. It is possible to intervene dramaticallyinthenormalprocessofevolutionarychangebygeneticmanipulation. Extensive screening of random mutations in a target species such as Arabidopsis thaliana can reveal genes that allow plants to survive rather simplified stress tests. This is but the first of many steps, but eventually these will have their impact, primarilyonagriculturalandindustrialcrops.Thereisahugeresearcheffortinthis areaandmuchoptimismaboutwhatcanbeachieved.Muchofitisdonewithlittle reference to plant physiology or biochemistry and has a curiously empirical char- acter.Onecansensethatthereisimpatiencewithplantphysiologythathasbeentoo slowindefiningstresstolerance,andabeliefthatifagenecanbefoundthatconfers tolerance, and it can be transferred to a species of interest, it is not of prime v
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