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Climate change may benefit plants through increased carbon dioxide, enhancing photosynthesis, but it also poses risks like higher temperatures and drier soils that can impede growth. The impact of climate change on plants largely depends on their ability to adapt to changing conditions. Researchers studied various tree species and simulated scenarios where forests either acclimate to or struggle with climate shifts.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views2 pages

Word Assessment 1

Climate change may benefit plants through increased carbon dioxide, enhancing photosynthesis, but it also poses risks like higher temperatures and drier soils that can impede growth. The impact of climate change on plants largely depends on their ability to adapt to changing conditions. Researchers studied various tree species and simulated scenarios where forests either acclimate to or struggle with climate shifts.

Uploaded by

kshdnbsfhs
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Climate change could be good

news for plants due to increased


atmospheric carbon dioxide, why
encourages photosynthesis. But it could
also lead to higher temperatures and dried-
out soil-conditions that hinder growth. The
degree to which climate change helps or
hurts plants depends in part on whether
forests can acclimate shifting conditions,
Researchers focused are regionally
abundant types such as birch, spruce,
aspen, poplar, and pir some of the
simulations, the team enabled forests too
acclimate to climate change by balancing
their density and t growth with the
constraints of reduced water and increased
heat. In other scenarios, these
characteristics remain same, representing
an inability to adapt to a shifting climate.
Climate change could be good
news for plants due to increased
atmospheric carbon dioxide, why
encourages photosynthesis. But it could
also lead to higher temperatures and dried-
out soil-conditions that hinder growth. The
degree to which climate change helps or
hurts plants depends in part on whether
forests can acclimate shifting conditions,
Researchers focused are regionally
abundant types such as birch, spruce,
aspen, poplar, and pir some of the
simulations, the team enabled forests too
acclimate to climate change by balancing
their density and t growth with the
constraints of reduced water and increased
heat. In other scenarios, these
characteristics remain same, representing
an inability to adapt to a shifting climate.

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