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Wind highways: mosses, lichens travel along aerial paths.


Invisible freeways of wind may account for the similarity of plant species on islands that lie thousands of kilometers apart, according to a novel study of satellite data.

NASA'S QuickSCAT satellite, launched in 1999, offered the first big picture of winds over oceans, explains Jesus Munoz of Real Botanic Garden in Madrid. He and his colleagues checked QuickSCAT's data against records of mosses and other nonflowering plants that grow in 27 spots in the far reaches of the Southern Hemisphere.

Spores Spores
A state of "suspended animation" that some bacteria can adopt when conditions are not ideal for growth. Spores are analogous to plant seeds and can germinate into growing bacteria when conditions are right.
 or tissue snippets of these plants waft along wind currents and can colonize col·o·nize  
v. col·o·nized, col·o·niz·ing, col·o·niz·es

v.tr.
1. To form or establish a colony or colonies in.

2. To migrate to and settle in; occupy as a colony.

3.
 new homes. Among the locations examined, similarities in plant species correlated better with wind patterns than with mere proximity, Munoz and his colleagues report in the May 21 Science.

This mix of satellite data with traditional botany permitted the first largescale test of "wind highways," says Munoz.

"I think it's a very clever approach" comments bryologist bry·ol·o·gy  
n.
The study of bryophytes.



bryo·logi·cal adj.
 Brent Mishler of the University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal .

Wind highways may sound feasible, but Munoz cautions that the idea was tricky to test. They chose the study area for its abundance of islands. A belt of winds blows roughly clockwise around Antarctica, but the pattern shifts and eddies form frequently. "It's very dynamic," says Munoz.

QuickSCAT, however, carries the Sea-Winds scatterometer, which bounces microwaves off water surfaces. The surface disturbances reveal wind direction and speed.

Munoz and his colleagues combed botanical records to see what mosses, liverworts, lichens Lichens

Symbiotic associations of fungi (mycobionts) and photosynthetic partners (photobionts). These associations always result in a distinct morphological body termed a thallus that may adhere tightly to the substrate or be leafy, stalked, or hanging.
, and members of the group that includes ferns grew at the study sites, which were mostly islands. Each location contained habitats suitable for most of the species, Munoz says.

The researchers used a geographer's analytic method to quantify how well the winds connected these locations. Overall, the wind highways explained the distribution of the moss, liverwort liverwort, any plant of the class Marchantiopsida. Mosses and liverworts together comprise the division Bryophyta, primitive green land plants (see moss; plant); some of the earliest land plants resembled modern liverworts. , and lichen lichen (lī`kən), usually slow-growing organism of simple structure, composed of fungi (see Fungi) and photosynthetic green algae or cyanobacteria living together in a symbiotic relationship and resulting in a structure that resembles neither  species better than proximity did, but ferns showed more-limited wind dispersal.

Bouvet Island, for example, lies 4,430 km from Heard Island, but they share 30 percent of their moss species, 29 percent of their liverworts, and 32 percent of their lichens. In contrast, Gough Island, which is only 1,860 km away from Bouvet, shares just 16 percent of mosses, 17 percent of liverworts, and no lichens.

Mishler points out that wind dispersal works well for mosses, liverworts, and lichens because, unlike flowering plants and ferns, many can regenerate front small asexual asexual /asex·u·al/ (a-sek´shoo-al) having no sex; not sexual; not pertaining to sex.

a·sex·u·al
adj.
1. Having no evident sex or sex organs; sexless.

2.
 structures or even tiny, broken-off pieces. Bonsai masters, for example, start moss carpets under their miniature trees by grinding moss and mud in a blender and troweling the slurry onto the soil.

Mishler adds that because many of the islands that his group considered came from volcanic eruptions rather than from ancient landmasses splitting apart, there's no confounding possibility that they originally shared a flora. For a more detailed look at migration history, he says, he'd now like to see DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 data on the similarity of the populations at these spots.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Date:May 22, 2004
Words:480
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