How Would Black Plants Impact Earth's Biomes and Green Plant Populations?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion explores the hypothetical introduction of "black plants," which are described as photosynthetically superior to green plants due to their ability to absorb all wavelengths of visible light. Participants consider the potential impacts of these black plants on Earth's biomes, ecosystems, and the populations of existing green plants.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that black plants could absorb more heat, potentially affecting tropical rainforests differently than tundras due to varying humidity and temperature conditions.
  • It is proposed that black plants may only have a competitive advantage in areas where light is a limiting factor, with other factors such as CO2, water, and nutrient availability also playing significant roles.
  • One viewpoint indicates that if black plants grow quicker and create greater biomass, they could outcompete green plants, similar to how invasive species like kudzu operate.
  • Concerns are raised about the adaptability of black plants to various environmental conditions, such as heat tolerance in semitropical ecosystems or cold tolerance in northern temperate zones.
  • A participant speculates that if black plants could thrive in polar regions, their growth might lead to significant ecological changes, including melting polar ice caps and subsequent sea-level rise.
  • Another participant argues that in non-light-limited environments, being a black plant could be disadvantageous, as green plants can absorb more light than they can utilize, leading to potential damage from excess energy.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the potential impacts of black plants, with no consensus reached on their overall effects on ecosystems or their competitive dynamics with green plants. Multiple competing perspectives remain throughout the discussion.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight various environmental parameters that could influence the success of black plants, such as heat tolerance, cold tolerance, and adaptability to different ecosystems. The discussion does not resolve the implications of these factors.

bomba923
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NOT homework, just curious :redface:

(*Let's say we have some healthy albeit imaginary black plants :smile:)

:eek: Would "black plants" pose a strict threat to the population of our currently flora (which happens to be green) ?

By "black plants" => photosynthetically-superior to green plants, in being able to absorb all wavelengths of visible light (i.e., green is NOT reflected off)
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Basically, how would the introduction of black plants affect Earth's biomes and the ecosystems within them?

For example, (I suppose?)
1) Black plants might absorb more heat, so tropical rainforests might not be strongly affected due to high external humidity preventing greater necessary transpiration ??

2) Tundras may be strongly affected. Extra photosynthetic capability of black plants helps combat the effect of permafrost ?? Not much heat in tundras either...?
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By "black plants," superior primarily in photosynthetic productivity (compared to green plants),

*What effects might the introduction of "black plants" have on Earth's biomes and the ecosystems within them, in general?

*And specifically on the populations of green plants?
 
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As far as competeition with green plants goes- Plants that can absorb more light would only have an advantage in areas where light is a limiting factor. Other limiting factors include CO2, water and nutrient (particularly phospherous) avaliability.
 
If a photosynthetically superior group of plants were competing side by side with our present plants, they may grow quicker and create greater biomass. They could overgrow or crowd out the inferior green plants and shift the ecosystem in their favor. Much like pernicious weeds such as kudzu has done. kudzu 1 and kudzu 2.

As matthyaouw also pointed out, in a light limiting environment, they may out compete and overcrowd the inferior green plants. Other environmental parameters are equally important. If the black plants were not as heat tolerant say in semitropical ecosystem or as cold tolerant in northern temperate zone; as the green plants, they would not fair as well. Similarly, if they were not as salt tolerant in a maritime coastal ecosystem, they would not fair as well. If they were not as drought tolerant in a xeric ecosystem, they would not fair as well.

Now if they were very cold tolerant and could grow on polar ice caps, then you would have a new problem, all the polar ice would melt, raising sea levels, flooding most of the coastal cities around the world, shutting down the major http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/images/maps/ocean_currents.jpg (Eastern Australian Current), causing cataclysmic climatic change around the world, resulting in famine, mass extinctions or at least a large shift in animal populations.

If these black plants could grow on the oceans & lakes, they would eventually cover 70% of the Earth's surface and if they grew equally well on land, they would cover an additional 29%. If our planet were composed of more hydrogen and a bit more massive, all the heat absorbed by the black foliage may ignite the Earth into a new sun! :cool:
 
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I think being a black plant would be a disadvantage in non-light-limited environments. Green plants usually absorb more light than they can use, and this can be a problem for them. They have to get rid of all the extra energy, or it can damage their chloroplasts. Plants have adaptations for that, like certain pigments which dissipate the extra energy.
 

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