A chance meeting a decade ago in a graduate school hallway led paleoecologist Jason McLachlan to create a Jurassic Park-like wonder in Notre Dame’s greenhouse, where rows of salt marsh bulrushes have germinated from 100-year-old seeds.

McLachlan said he and a colleague were trying to figure out where they could find some dirt that contained ancient DNA, genetic traces of once-living things found in sediment samples. They ran into a friend studying changing levels of salinity in the salt marshes that run along the East Coast from New Jersey to South Carolina. The friend said he’d noticed that, occasionally, seeds in century-old sediment germinated spontaneously. He didn’t think much of it.

But the discussion sparked a light bulb moment: Why worry about ancient DNA when you can get seeds that bring the past to life so you can study a living organism?

A decade later, McLachlan and his team grow these century-old bulrushes to learn how the East Coast may respond to storms as the climate continues to change. The plants in these tidal marshes perform a key role in protecting the coast from storm erosion, so how they evolve can have a profound effect on everything from wave strength to where to build a beach home.

Across the world and on a vastly different time scale — about 7 million years — Notre Dame organic geochemist Melissa Berke joined an international team of scientists taking mud samples from below the Indian Ocean earlier this year. She studies changes in how ocean currents have affected global weather patterns since the earliest days of the human species.

Predictions for future climate change are only as good as the historical data that goes into the scientific models. Both McLachlan and Berke are gathering data and performing analysis that aims to improve those forecast models. Both dig into the earth to find organic evidence of climate change; both study the past to understand and predict the climate future.

“We both are working on something we were able to pull out of old material that can help us make a reconstruction of what that time period was like,” Berke says. “If you don’t understand how the earth and its systems work, it would be almost impossible to say what might happen in the future. It’s our understanding of the past that can tell us what’s going on now and what’s likely to happen next.”

Melissa Berke in a white lab coat

Powerful currents

Berke, the Clare Boothe Luce Assistant Professor in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering & Earth Sciences affiliated with Notre Dame’s Environmental Change Initiative (ECI), and a graduate student took a two-month trip aboard a research ship run by the International Ocean Discovery Program. The trip last January started from Mauritius in the Indian Ocean and went down the east coast of Africa and around the southern tip of the continent to Cape Town.

Animated arrows showing the Agulhas currents.

This route follows the powerful Agulhas Current, which carries large volumes of warm water along the Mozambique Channel. Most of the water circles back into the Indian Ocean, but significant eddies spin off and drift into the Atlantic Ocean as unusually warm pockets of water. The Agulhas Current and eddies affect ocean activity ranging from surface temperatures to wind, impacting weather patterns from Africa all the way to the Americas — similar to the way North America experiences the influence of El Niño from the Pacific.

“These currents are all part of a global conveyor belt that moves parcels of water around the world’s oceans,” Berke says. “They are what link the coast of Africa to the coast of the United States. The driving force of what’s pulling moisture onto land or wind patterns on the continents are sea surface temperatures and circulation changes. Ocean conditions really matter to both weather and climate.”

While weather is short term, Berke is most interested in long-term patterns of weather known as climate change. The longer time scales allow her to study major patterns as well as extreme disturbances such as an ice age to see how living things recovered or changed after those events.

Why go back 7 million years? McLachlan pointed to a Winston Churchill quote: “The farther back you can look, the further forward you are likely to see.”

“The farther back you can look, the further forward you are likely to see.”

How Berke achieves these goals is where the project gets more technical. Working 12-hour shifts on the ship, about three dozen scientists took core samples from targeted spots under the ocean. The ship has drilling equipment that can force a hollow tube deep into the ocean floor and pull up mud cores hundreds of feet long. The tubes are wrapped in plastic and cut into slices for study.

From various locations, the group collected a total of six kilometers of ocean floor mud that represented seven million years of time — in locations and of a scale that Berke called unprecedented. Her role on board was to identify dangerous pockets of gas to avoid while drilling and to perform initial chemical analysis, while her graduate student worked as a sedimentologist writing detailed descriptions of each sample.

“The core samples give us a nice record of what went on in the past,” she says. “Long periods of time are recorded in these tubes of mud.”

Melissa Berke, graduate student Cartagena Sierra and another scientist discuss preliminary tests on ancient mud samples
Melissa Berke, graduate student Cartagena Sierra (right) and another scientist discuss preliminary tests on ancient mud samples while on board an international research ship. (Photo provided by Tim Fulton)
Keith O’Connor, in Berke’s lab extracting organic material from mud samples
A graduate student, Keith O’Connor, in Berke’s lab extracts organic material from mud samples taken from the Indian Ocean floor during her two-month expedition along the African coast last year.

Back in the lab, where the official samples finally arrived in November, Berke and her students perform a series of separations to extract the organic material, the components of former life. From these markers, which derive from ocean life like algae or bits of trees from land, Berke can draw conclusions about temperature, precipitation and other conditions on both land and ocean for a sample depth that correlates to a specific time period.

The project is a four-year commitment that began on ship and will continue through the publishing of data and papers. The first step is to determine how past conditions and changes influenced the climate. Then data from the past can improve the models for predicting the future.

“Understanding what is going on in the ocean isn’t just an esoteric, academic problem,” Berke says. “It’s what goes into weather forecasting and future models and can tell us what’s causing major storms and major climate pattern changes.”

Jason McLachlan surrounded by plants

Century-old seeds

McLachlan, an associate professor in the Department of Biological Sciences also affiliated with ECI, studies plant populations to understand environmental and biological change. He is intrigued by how different species respond to climate changes such as rising sea levels, higher temperatures and increased carbon dioxide.

When he and a colleague heard about the salt marsh seeds, he knew growing 100-year-old bulrushes “would be a great way to answer questions about how fast evolution can happen when climate is changing.”

Forecast models for coastal resilience to storms take into account the importance of the salt marshes. These beds of grasses and sedges, submerged in high tide and muddy in low tides, dissipate the pounding waves, trap carbon dioxide in the mud, and anchor the soil to keep it from washing away.

But McLachlan says the models don’t account for evolutionary change in the plants. Using some internal funding and fellowship grants, McLachlan and his students dug up sediment samples about a foot deep in the marshes. They sifted through the mud to find potentially viable seeds.

Only about 2 percent of the bulrush seeds could be brought to life. “Once you get one of these ancient seeds to germinate, it’s like a precious thing from the past, so we really baby them along and help them grow,” McLachlan says.

The first thing the team discovered is that the plants from a century ago were physically different from modern bulrushes — characteristics like stem width, height, color and density. Then they began to study what difference these changes make in how they perform their role protecting the coasts.

Illustration of a seedling
Width & Height
Ven diagram of three green circles
Color
4x4 brown squares
Density

“If we take modern seeds and put their performance in the model, coasts will be preserved up until a certain amount of sea level increase,” he says. “But if we use older plants, then it’s different. It affects their ability to resist.”

Early tests have concluded the plants’ evolutionary changes have an impact, but McLachlan is seeking funding from the National Science Foundation to determine whether the new plants perform better or worse at coastal protection and what should be done about it. Update the forecast models, first, but the next step may be managing the plant population in the marshes.

“Already coastal systems are collapsing,” McLachlan says. “If sea level keeps rising, we don’t know how resilient the coasts are. We have models, but they don’t include this wisdom from the past. We’re trying to bring that to the models so we can have a sense of how they deal with big changes.”

One of the key characteristics of the bulrushes is that they can be cloned. The plants put out thick roots from which another stem will grow. Because it’s the same plant with the same genotype, scientists can perform a series of experiments with these replicas as a control group. For instance, they can compare how the new and old plants differ in response to changes in carbon dioxide, salinity or heat.

Professor Jason McLachlan's collection of modern and 100-year-old bulrush plants grow in the greenhouse of Galvin Life Science Center.
Jason McLachlan's collection of modern and 100-year-old bulrush plants grow in the greenhouse of Galvin Life Science Center.
McLachlan and former student Rachel Koch collect core samples in a salt marsh in Maryland along the Chesapeake Bay, where they study how plants can affect storm erosion and climate change.
McLachlan and former student Rachel Koch collect core samples in a salt marsh in Maryland along the Chesapeake Bay, where they study how plants can affect storm erosion and climate change.

In fact, the opportunities are so ripe that about 250 undergraduates studying biology carry out hands-on experiments with the plants in their first-year lab classes. The arrangement illustrates how cutting-edge research can contribute directly to better instruction in the classroom. The students come up with their own questions and conduct their own month-long experiments that incorporate elements of genetics, evolution, ecology and global change biology. Their data is part of the proposal used to apply for further funding.

“It’s the miracle of life, seeing these cool little things come up and figuring out what makes them thrive or suffer,” McLachlan says. “This is not some canned experiment where you know what the outcome will be. It’s really neat to have your hands on this ancient organism and see how evolution has changed its biology over 100 years. It’s like Gregor Mendel’s peas, but not as abstract. The differences in these plants is the difference between life and death on the coast of South Carolina.”