ACUMEN_Spring_2024

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES 3 modes of Qi, the life force that animates the universe as well as the human body. The study of manuscripts shows the popular conception that the later approach replaced the earlier one is false. The practices existed at different levels of society, evolving and informing each other over the eons up to the present time. The most significant changes began in the imperial era, with the rise of the Qin dynasty in the third century BCE. Then, we see the rise of recipe texts addressing named illnesses. Evidence of cosmic medicine and a simple inner-body meridian system appears in 168 BCE silk manuscripts from a middle Yangtze River Valley tomb. These theoretical texts were mixed in with recipe texts, which qualify as magical medicine from the modern standpoint. A stunning find of texts recently in Chengdu Basin in western China shows the continued mix of approaches but also the beginning of titled manuscripts and collections. The fact that an inscribed lacquered figurine with a simple meridian system was included in the same coffin as the texts suggests an integrated system of verbal and textual transmission for medical knowledge. EARTH & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES UNDERSTORY REGENERATION Natural disturbances such as tornadoes, ice storms or insect outbreaks can maintain forest diversity by creating a heterogeneous forest ecosystem. Yet, almost all forest landscapes are subject to multiple human- or animal-created stressors, which can deter plant diversity and forest recovery after natural disturbances. In the first large-scale field experiment that tested four simultaneous disturbances, a team of researchers led by forest ecologist Michelle Spicer is providing new insights into the impact of these disturbances on helping native plant species. Using an area in western Pennsylvania that was struck by a tornado in 2012, the team picked four large tornado blowdowns where most of the overstory fell to the ground. Researchers compared the plant groups in the experimental area to undisturbed nearby forest areas, attempting to explain the effects of deer browsing, biomass changes and salvage logging on understory regeneration and plant species diversity. “Salvage logging is really common,” says Spicer, assistant professor of Earth and environmental sciences. “There’s this big question of ‘is salvage logging good or bad?’ If you’re a landowner and you had planned on harvesting some of your forest in 10 years, then a tornado comes through and blows down half the forest, you salvage some of the profits by logging at that point when the trees fell. That’s one of the things that’s actually really debated. Salvage logging has a much lower impact than clear-cutting because the trees have already fallen down naturally. On the other hand, there’s a lot of carbon that has just gone into the understory. Maybe it would be good to leave it. In what context do we have these impacts?” Spicer and her colleagues analyzed plant diversity and abundance of trees, herbs, shrubs and vines after the tornado blowdown. They discovered that deer had a negligible effect on regrowth, while the combination of natural windthrow and salvage logging had the greatest positive impact on understory plant communities. The herbaceous plant species were the major drivers of regeneration patterns, while tree species were largely unaffected by the intense disturbances The results highlight the need for greater consideration of nontree growth forms in forest ecology and management, particularly for the conservation of plant diversity, Spicer says. Scientists’ understanding of the mechanisms underlying the diversity and abundance of herbaceous plants lag far behind those of trees, though herbs make up the vast majority of temperate vascular plant species. The research contributes important data to forest disturbance models as well as changes the views of effective eastern deciduous forest management practices to include herbs, shrubs and vines. ALAMY STOCK PHOTO, ISTOCK Acupuncture bronze statue.

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