a new analysis of fossilized(石化的) grass-1 grains deposited on ancient european lake and sea bottoms 16-35 million years ago reveals that c4 grasses evolved earlier than 2 thought. this new evidence casts doubt on the widely-held belief that the rise of this incredibly productive group of plants was driven by a large drop in 3 carbon dioxide concentrations during the oligocene(渐新世的) 4(新纪元,新时代) . the research team, led by university of maryland center for environmental science appalachian laboratory researcher dr. david nelson and university of illinois professor feng sheng hu, examined the carbon 5 signatures of hundreds of grass-pollen grains and found that c4 grasses were already present on the landscape during the early part of the oligocene, some 14 million years earlier than previously thought from geological evidence. their findings are now published online in the journal geology and will shortly appear in the print edition.
"the idea that c4 grasses originated prior to global decreases in carbon dioxide levels requires us to reevaluate the way we think about the evolution of c4 6(光合作用) ," said dr. nelson. "this new information should encourage the examination of alternate 7 selection pressures, such as warm temperatures or dry climates."
c4 plants compose only 3 percent of flowering plant species, yet account for about 25 percent global terrestrial(地球的,陆地的) productivity. about 60% of c4 species are grasses, and they dominate the world's 8 and 9(热带草原) biomes, particularly those in warmer, lower 10 areas. their 11 success results from the way these species concentrate and then fix carbon dioxide in order to power photosynthesis. while the most well known c4 plants are 12(玉米) and sugar 13, both of which are critical to human consumption, there is a growing interest in their use as biofuels in order to capture carbon from the atmosphere to 14(减轻,缓和) increasing global carbon dioxide levels.
the team used an 15 technique pioneered by dr. nelson earlier in his career - the single pollen isotope ratio analysis or spiral – to 16 the samples. the scientists first extracted grains of grass pollen from sedimentary rocks(沉淀岩) using a micromanipulator; then 17 the tiny samples using a microcombustion device 18 with an isotope ratio mass spectrometer in ann pearson's laboratory at harvard university, which houses one of only a handful of these devices in the world. through this analysis, they were able to detect the signature of c4 species from their more common c3 counterparts, because c4 and c3 plants take up different ratios of carbon 19 during photosynthesis.
"spiral enables us to detect c4 grasses at much lower abundances in geological records than previous approaches, which is 20 to revolutionize our ability to study their ecology and evolution," said dr. hu. university of illinois graduate student michael urban, lead author of the paper, continues to analyze samples from other parts of the world to look at variation in c4-grass abundance in relation to past changes in atmospheric co2 and climate.