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09/05/2025 15:46

Mirror image molecules reveal drought stress in the Amazon rainforest

Claudia Dolle Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Max-Planck-Institut für Chemie

    New study by the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry shows: The ratio of certain forest scent molecules provides precise insights into the stress state of the rainforest

    • The ratio of α-pinene mirror molecules provides a clear indicator of drought stress in the Amazon rainforest.
    • During the record drought of 2023, the ratio of the two forms of α-pinene shifted significantly – a direct sign of stress and metabolic changes in the plants.
    • Under extreme drought, plants switch off photosynthesis and release more monoterpenes from storage;
    • Measurements at the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory (ATTO) enable the direct detection of these stress signals in the air.
    • The data obtained is valuable for climate models to realistically depict the effects of more frequent and intense droughts.

    In 2023, the Amazon rainforest experienced its worst recorded drought since records began. River levels dropped dramatically and vegetation at all levels deteriorated due to intense heat and water shortages. In such conditions, plants release increased amounts of monoterpenes—small, volatile organic compounds that act as a defense mechanism and help communication with their environment. Some molecules, such as α-pinene, which smells like pine, occur as mirror-image pairs, known as enantiomers.

    The ratio of these two forms changes measurably when plants are under stress, for example due to heat or water shortage. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry investigated how this ratio changed in the Amazon before, during, and after the drought period. The results show that under normal conditions a clear ratio was consistently measured, but with increasing drought stress it shifted to ever higher values. In the most extreme phase of the drought, the usual ratio of the two α-pinene variants even reversed. Thus, the mirror molecules of α-pinene can tell us how much stress an ecosystem is currently under.

    Giovanni Pugliese, a scientist from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry who was on site during the measurement campaign, recalls: “The heat was unbearable when collecting the samples. The forest was clearly suffering; its leaves were yellowing and the dry clay soil was cracking”. The problem in 2023 was that the September to October dry season coincided with an El Niño event. This is part of the global climate oscillation ENSO, and in El Niño mode, it brings extremely low rainfall and high temperatures to the Amazon basin.

    Measurements deep in the rainforest

    At the measuring station of the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory (ATTO), 150 kilometers northeast of Manaus, the researchers collected air samples at a height of 24 meters directly in the forest canopy. In the laboratory in Mainz, they later determined the ratio of the two α-pinene forms using chiral gas chromatography-time-of-flight-mass spectrometry.

    “First, we determined the ratio in which the two variants occur under normal conditions,” explains Joseph Byron, researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and first author of the study. “We then observed how this ratio shifted during the El Niño-impacted dry season and slowly returned to normal afterwards.”

    Plants in survival mode

    Project leader Jonathan Williams is impressed by these vegetation responses and explains further, “It is amazing that we can read directly from the air how the rainforest is reacting to current conditions. During the worst part of the drought, when the ratio flipped at midday, we knew that the vegetation had had enough, it had stopped photosynthesizing and closed up its pores to stop losing precious ground water ”. This work builds on an earlier experimental drought study conducted in an enclosed forest grown within a greenhouse. (See https://www.mpic.de/5265797/spiegelmolekuele-trockenstress). There the Max Planck Research team then showed that the two mirror-image molecules are released via different processes in the plant: while one form of α-pinene is released immediately after photosynthesis , the mirror molecule comes from storage pools within the plant. The indoor experiment revealed this relationship and now this behavior has been recorded in the real-world extreme drought situation in the Amazon rainforest.

    Significance for climate models

    The Amazon rainforest is the world's largest source of biogenic volatile compounds. Using the ratio of α-pinene molecules, these emissions and their changes under drought conditions can now be represented more realistically in climate models. This is crucial because researchers expect more frequent and severe El Niño-related droughts in future.

    Background ATTO

    ATTO is a German-Brazilian joint project which was launched in 2009. It is managed by the Max Planck Institutes for Biogeochemistry in Jena and for Chemistry in Mainz, as well as by the Brazilian INPA and the Amazon State University (UEA) in Manaus. The project is funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), the Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia e Inovações (MCTI), the Max Planck Society and the Brazilian organizations including FAPEAM and individual researchers bring funding from other scientific funding agencies.

    The tower aims to deliver groundbreaking findings which will be the basis for improved climate models. With a height of 325 meters, the tower extends the ground-level boundary layer, and provides information from approximately 100 square kilometers of the world´s largest forest area.

    More on ATTO: https://www.mpic.de/3538403/ATTO


    Contact for scientific information:

    Prof. Dr. Jonathan Williams
    Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz
    Atmospheric Chemistry Department
    Phone: +49 6131 305-4500
    Email: jonathan.williams@mpic.de

    Dr. Joseph Byron
    Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz
    Atmospheric Chemistry Department
    Email: j.byron@mpic.de


    Original publication:

    Mirror image molecules expose state of rainforest stress" by Joseph Byron, Giovanni Pugliese, Carolina Monteiro, Michelle Robin, Eliane Gomes Alves, Johanna Schuettler, S. Christoph Hartmann, Achim Edtbauer, Bianca Krumm, Nora Zannoni, Anywhere Tsokankunku, Cléo Dias-Junior, Carlos Quesada, Hartwig Harder, Efstratios Bourtsoukidis, Jos Lelieveld, Jonathan Williams,
    Communications Earth & Environment 6, 703 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02709-z


    More information:

    https://www.mpic.de/5772385/spiegelmolekuele-indikatoren-stress-regenwald


    Images

    The desiccated riverbed of the Uatumã River in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest, photographed in 2024.
    The desiccated riverbed of the Uatumã River in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest, photographed in 2024 ...
    Source: Sebastian Brill, MPIC
    Copyright: Sebastian Brill, MPIC


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists
    Biology, Chemistry, Environment / ecology, Oceanology / climate
    transregional, national
    Research projects, Research results
    English


     

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