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January 17, 2003

Pitcher plants as models for ecosystem change

Researchers studying the northern pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea) at the Harvard Forest Long-Term Ecological Research site found that the water-filled pool within a pitcher plant is a tiny ecosystem whose inner workings are similar to those of a full-scale water body.

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The NSF-funded study, which was led by Harvard Forest senior ecologist Aaron Ellison and Jennie Sirota, a 2012 Harvard Forest Summer Research Program participant from North Dakota State University, investigated the factors that cause some lakes and ponds to shift from clear, oxygen-rich states to irreversible green sludge. Those green ponds have passed a critical threshold, called a "tipping point"--a situation in which an ecosystem experiences a shift to a new state, with significant changes to biodiversity. Until now, the mechanisms behind those tipping points were poorly understood.

Instead of conducting their work in a pond or lake, the researchers used the tiny confines of the carnivorous pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea). The water-filled pool within a pitcher plant is a tiny ecosystem, whose inner workings are similar to those of a full-scale water body. These plants host complex aquatic environments and food webs that are strongly impacted by changes in nutrient levels, just as life in lakes and ponds can be disrupted when too many nutrients--such as in fertilizers and pollution--overload the system. When that happens, these aquatic ecosystems can cross "tipping points" and change drastically. Excess nutrients cause algae to bloom and bacteria eating the algae use up oxygen in the water. The result is a murky green lake.

"The first step to preventing tipping points is to understand what causes them in the first place," said Ellison, "and for that you need an experiment where you can demonstrate cause and effect."

For the study, the researchers demonstrated how to reliably trigger tipping points by continually adding a set amount of organic matter--comparable to decomposing algae in a lake--to the small aquatic ecosystem in the pitcher plants. "We would need to study a lake for 100 years to get the same information that we can get from a pitcher plant in less than a week, says Ellison. "The same mathematical models can be used to describe either a pitcher plant ecosystem or a lake."

"These researchers have looked at the minute ecosystems that thrive in pitcher plant leaves to determine early warning signals and to find ways of predicting and possibly forestalling such 'tipping points,'" says Saran Twombly, a program director in NSF's Division of Environmental Biology, which funded the research. [Research supported by NSF grants DBI 1003938, DEB 1144055 and DEB 1144056.]

To read more about this research, see the NSF press release Earth Day: Big ecosystem changes viewed through the lens of tiny carnivorous plants. (Date of Image: August 2003)

Credit: Aaron M. Ellison, Harvard Forest


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