Warming effects on shoot developmental growth and biomass production in sympatric evergreen alpine dwarf shrubs Empetrum nigrum and Loiseleuria procumbens

Effects of experimental warming on shoot developmental growth and biomass production were preliminarily investigated in two evergreen dwarf shrubs Empetrum nigrum and Loiseleuria procumbens , using the International Tundra Experiment’s open‐top chamber (OTC) method, in the Tateyama Range, central Ja...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ecological Research
Main Authors: Wada, Naoya, Shimono, Masaki, Miyamoto, Michiru, Kojima, Satoru
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2002
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1703.2002.00469.x
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Summary:Effects of experimental warming on shoot developmental growth and biomass production were preliminarily investigated in two evergreen dwarf shrubs Empetrum nigrum and Loiseleuria procumbens , using the International Tundra Experiment’s open‐top chamber (OTC) method, in the Tateyama Range, central Japan. An OTC was installed over shrub ( E. nigrum and L. procumbens ) ‐dominated vegetation and over shrub‐forb (such as Anemone narcissiflora var. nipponica and Solidago virga‐aurea ssp. leiocarpa ) mixed vegetation, and stem samples of the evergreen shrubs were obtained at 26 months after installing the OTC. The OTC increased the daily mean temperature by 0.1°C to 1.8°C, on average, during the growing season. Shoot developmental growth and biomass production were considerably different between species of different vegetation types. The boreal species E. nigrum generally showed better growth inside the OTC than the arctic and subarctic species L. procumbens . Both species showed significantly larger shoot elongation and biomass production inside the OTC over shrub‐dominated vegetation, whereas smaller or reduced growth was detected inside the OTC over shrub‐forb mixed vegetation. The variations of growth responses to warming between species of different vegetation types are discussed, especially in relation to interspecific competition under a simulated environmental change.