Summer monsoon rains the cacti rely on have failed to arrive,
testing the desert giants' ability to survive in the wild as
well as in cities after temperatures above 110 degrees
Fahrenheit (43 Celsius) for 25 days in Phoenix, said Tania
Hernandez.
"These plants are adapted to this heat, but at some point the
heat needs to cool down and the water needs to come," said
Hernandez, a research scientist at Phoenix's 140-acre
(57-hectare) Desert Botanical Garden, which has over 2/3 of all
cactus species, including saguaros which can grow to over 40
feet (12 meters).
Plant physiologists at the Phoenix garden are studying how much
heat cacti can take. Until recently many thought the plants were
perfectly adapted to high temperatures and drought. Arizona's
heat wave is testing those assumptions.
Cacti need to cool down at night or through rain and mist. If
that does not happen they sustain internal damage. Plants now
suffering from prolonged, excessive heat may take months or
years to die, Hernandez said.
Cacti in Phoenix are being studied as the city is a heat island,
mimicking higher temperatures plants in the wild are expected to
face with future climate change, Hernandez said.
(Reporting By Liliana Salgado, writing by Andrew Hay; Editing by
Sandra Maler)
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