Jun Yu, Maria E. Eriksson and Bertold
Mariën inspecting young trees in UPSC. Credit: Gabrielle Beans
A
new study from Umeå University has revealed that trees' circadian clocks guide
their growth and the timing of seasonal events like the appearance of leaves in
spring. The researchers investigated the growth of genetically modified poplars
in greenhouse and field conditions, combining statistical learning and plant
biology methods. Their findings, published in npj
Biological Timing and Sleep, suggest that adjusting clock-associated genes
could help trees better synchronize with changing climates, offering new
opportunities for forestry.
Trees, like humans, have a circadian
clock that regulates their daily and seasonal rhythms. Research has suggested
that this clock is important to regulate growth and the timing of important
seasonal events, like for example, bud formation in autumn and bud opening in
spring.
However, most of this research has been
done in controlled greenhouse conditions and not outside in the field where
plants are exposed to natural environmental conditions. In the field, as in the
real world, temperature fluctuations, insect predation and other factors affect plant growth.
To address this, the researchers
conducted an extensive study based on 68 poplar or aspen lines with different,
modified properties. Among the genes that were modified were many associated
with the circadian clock. These trees'
growth was studied in multiple greenhouse and field experiments over several
years. The results clearly showed that the circadian clock has a strong role in
regulating tree growth and the timing of seasonal events in the life of a tree,
like the budding of leaves.
"Our study is the first to combine
datasets from greenhouse and field studies to show that multiple aspects of the
circadian clock system influence tree growth and the timing of life-cycle
events," says Bertold Mariën, lead author of the study.
"By applying statistical modeling to these datasets, we were able to pinpoint which circadian clock-associated genes impact tree growth or, for example, the time when leaves appear or change color."
Schematic roadmap of the growth chamber
(GCE; yellow), phenotyping platform (PPE; blue), and field (FE; red)
experiments done between 2014 and 2020. Credit: npj Biological Timing and Sleep (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s44323-025-00034-4
Insights for forestry and climate adaptation
The study provides a new
perspective on how trees use their circadian clock to coordinate their growth
with the environment. For example, certain genetic modifications in key clock
regulators changed the trees' sensing of the day length and allowed trees to continue growing later into
the season.
"This study is a
proof-of-concept that trees conditioned to a particular length of day at a
certain latitude can be adapted to a new latitude, effectively extending their
growing season. This is especially useful at higher latitudes, like in Northern Sweden, where short growing seasons
limit timber production," explains Maria E. Eriksson, last author of the
study.
Additionally, some gene
modifications improved the trees' resilience under environmental fluctuations.
By focusing on these specific genes, it would be possible to breed tree varieties that
are better adapted to rapid changes in the local climate, and to new growing locations, for example in other
latitudes.
"In the future, forestry
management could be improved by integrating trees' circadian clocks and their
natural growth cycles with traditional practices," says Eriksson. "In
this way, tree growth and resilience could be optimized in a changing
world."
Beyond the implications for
forestry, the study also has relevance for global vegetation models that
predict forest growth and carbon storage. The importance of the clock in
shaping trees' sensitivity to environmental conditions is often underestimated
in these models, according to Mariën.
He concludes, "By properly
incorporating our findings on the circadian clock into global vegetation models, we can improve
predictions of how forests will respond to climate change."
by Gabrielle Beans Picón, Umea
University
Source: Adjusting trees' internal clocks can help them cope with climate change
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