Kali Middleby
@kalimiddleby.bsky.social
1.4K followers 270 following 30 posts
Postdoc at AMAPlab, Montpellier. Interested in forest ecology, plant physiology, heat stress, and rainforest conservation 🌿
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Reposted by Kali Middleby
aunz.theconversation.com
In full sun, tropical leaves can become much hotter than the surrounding air. Their ability to cope can be a matter of life or death.

👉 Read the full story: theconversation.com/some-tr...
Reposted by Kali Middleby
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Featured on the cover of @globalchangebio.bsky.social is a thermal image of Elaeocarpus Grandis taken at @jcuofficial.bsky.social Daintree Rainforest Observatory. In this species we find that populations originating from warmer climates have narrower leaves with higher rates of water loss.
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
What a wonderful time sharing ideas with fellow plant nerds 💚
newphyt.bsky.social
Thank you to our brilliant delegates, mentors, speakers, the organising committee and our hosts at the University of Birmingham for making New Phytologist next generation scientists 2025 a great success!
Large group of diverse scientists and researchers gathered outside a modern building for a New Phytologist next generation scientists symposium.
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Link to our session and more information on our speakers here:

www.xcdsystem.com/atbc/program...
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Heading to Oaxaca for #ATBC2025 ? Make sure you stop by our symposium for all things leaf temperature, heat tolerance, and tradeoffs across climate gradients 🌿💧🌡️
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Proud to have my thermal image on the cover of this fantastic issue - now time to check out the research inside!
science.org
As the world warms, plants in natural ecosystems and agricultural settings find ways to respond to the heat.

In a new special issue of Science, researchers examine how heat affects plants at multiple scales, from the molecular level to the biosphere. scim.ag/44cSw3Z
Infrared imaging shows heat levels in sun-exposed leaves of Alstonia scholaris from the Australian Wet Tropics. As climate change increases temperatures and the severity of heat waves, both natural ecosystems and agricultural plants are increasingly affected by heat. Examining heat responses at cellular, genetic, physiological, and ecosystem scales, this special issue explores how plants sense and respond to high temperatures.
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
We didn't record it unfortunately - but I would be happy to share the slides with you
Reposted by Kali Middleby
umramap.bsky.social
#AMAPwebinar april 29th, 11:00 (CET)
Kali Middeby, post-doc, AMAPlab, Montpellier
"Patterns and drivers of leaf thermoregulation in rainforest trees of the Australian Wet Tropics"
amap.cirad.fr/fr/edit-even...
UMR AMAP - botAnique et Modélisation de l'Architecture des Plantes et des végétations
amap.cirad.fr
Reposted by Kali Middleby
wkolby.bsky.social
Happy to share a new paper, "Effects of Hot Versus Dry Vapor Pressure Deficit on Ecosystem Carbon and Water Fluxes," led by the amazing Miriam Johnston w/ @mallorybarnes.bsky.social and others agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/...
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Could I please be added?
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
How do tropical rainforest trees respond to warming? 🌡️🌿We experimentally warmed canopy leaves by 4°C for 8 months and found significant declines in photosynthesis and stomatal conductance, with no shift in Topt. Read the new paper, led by Kristine Crous here: shorturl.at/AVTOk
Surrounded by lush vegetation in a tropical forest canopy, three take-away containers have been customised to warm leaves continuously A density plot shows the distribution of observed leaf temperatures for one example species - Myristica globosa. The graph shows that warmed leaves surpass their optimum temperature far more frequently than control leaves, and are close to their critical temperature threshold
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
I remember that paper - I was actually speaking with Lucas about it recently, definitely have some ideas that could be fun to explore!
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Key finding? Intraspecific variation in leaf traits plays a crucial role in preventing exposure to damaging temperatures. However, broader assessments across more species are needed to determine whether patterns emerge across phylogeny, functional types, or biomes.

Reach out if you’d like to chat!
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
To see how physiological and morphological acclimation to treatments affected thermoregulation, I then monitored leaf temperature & water use. Air temperature was ramped up from 18 to 38°C, and VPD was lowered from 4 to 1.5 kPa. This revealed some very complex responses - watch this space!
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Temperature and vapour pressure deficit are highly correlated, complicating efforts to assess their impact on trait variation. I disentangled the effects of these variables on sapling growth, physiology, and leaf traits in a glasshouse experiment shorturl.at/kb87b @newphyt.bsky.social
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
Although intraspecific variation led to enhanced leaf cooling at warmer sites for some species - this was not always the case. Diverse species thermoregulation strategies were also observed when comparing lowland vs upland origin trees grown in a provenance trial for 2 years shorturl.at/sjdtV
kalimiddleby.bsky.social
After this, most of my time/life was spent in the forest measuring heat tolerance & leaf traits across elevation gradients. This was used to paramaterise a leaf energy balance model to predict leaf-air temperature variation, & combined with genomic data to assess local adaptation shorturl.at/lDr2U
Local adaptation drives thermoregulation in tropical rainforest trees
AbstractGlobally, the increasing frequency of heatwaves and droughts are impacting tropical forests, which are vital for maintaining biodiversity, carbon sequestration and climate regulation. But vuln...
shorturl.at