Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion

Abstract Background Shifts in phenology have been widely reported in response to global warming and have strong effects on ecosystem processes and greenhouse gas emissions. It is well documented that warming generally advances many phenophases of aboveground plant phenology, but its influence on roo...

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Main Authors: Radville, Laura, Post, Eric, Eissenstat, David
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.climatechangeresponses.com/content/3/1/4
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spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:s40665-016-0017-0 2023-05-15T14:54:31+02:00 Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion Radville, Laura Post, Eric Eissenstat, David 2016-06-08 http://www.climatechangeresponses.com/content/3/1/4 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.climatechangeresponses.com/content/3/1/4 Copyright 2016 Radville et al. Root phenology Arctic Climate change Herbivory Research 2016 ftbiomed 2016-06-11T23:59:59Z Abstract Background Shifts in phenology have been widely reported in response to global warming and have strong effects on ecosystem processes and greenhouse gas emissions. It is well documented that warming generally advances many phenophases of aboveground plant phenology, but its influence on root phenology is unclear. Most terrestrial biosphere models assume that root and shoot growth occur at the same time and are influenced by warming in the same manner, but recent studies suggest that this may not be the case. Testing this assumption is particularly important in the Arctic where over 70 % of plant biomass can be belowground and warming is happening faster than in other ecosystems. Herbivory may mediate the impacts of warming, and carbon removal from grazing may alter carbon available for root growth. In 2013 and 2014 we examined the timing of root growth in Arctic shrub-graminoid communities in a fully factorial design of plots that were warmed or ambient and excluded or permitted access by large herbivores. Results Peak root growth occurred two and one half weeks before leaf growth, suggesting that spring root phenology is not controlled by carbon produced during spring photosynthesis. This may uncouple spring root phenology from spring shoot phenology. Consistent with such uncoupling, spring leaf cover was advanced by warming and delayed by herbivory, but neither treatment significantly affected root phenology. Root growth was not driven by soil temperature, and occurred in near-freezing temperatures above the permafrost. Additionally, summer root production appeared to be linked to soil moisture at this relatively dry site, and autumn phenology was not driven by photoperiod as previous studies have suggested. Conclusions Root phenology was not directly driven by temperature in this system, promoting differential above- and belowground phenological responses to warming and herbivore exclusion. Aboveground phenology, one of the most widely measured aspects of climate change, may not represent whole-plant phenology or indicate the timing of whole-plant carbon fluxes as commonly assumed. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Climate change Global warming permafrost BioMed Central Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
topic Root phenology
Arctic
Climate change
Herbivory
spellingShingle Root phenology
Arctic
Climate change
Herbivory
Radville, Laura
Post, Eric
Eissenstat, David
Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion
topic_facet Root phenology
Arctic
Climate change
Herbivory
description Abstract Background Shifts in phenology have been widely reported in response to global warming and have strong effects on ecosystem processes and greenhouse gas emissions. It is well documented that warming generally advances many phenophases of aboveground plant phenology, but its influence on root phenology is unclear. Most terrestrial biosphere models assume that root and shoot growth occur at the same time and are influenced by warming in the same manner, but recent studies suggest that this may not be the case. Testing this assumption is particularly important in the Arctic where over 70 % of plant biomass can be belowground and warming is happening faster than in other ecosystems. Herbivory may mediate the impacts of warming, and carbon removal from grazing may alter carbon available for root growth. In 2013 and 2014 we examined the timing of root growth in Arctic shrub-graminoid communities in a fully factorial design of plots that were warmed or ambient and excluded or permitted access by large herbivores. Results Peak root growth occurred two and one half weeks before leaf growth, suggesting that spring root phenology is not controlled by carbon produced during spring photosynthesis. This may uncouple spring root phenology from spring shoot phenology. Consistent with such uncoupling, spring leaf cover was advanced by warming and delayed by herbivory, but neither treatment significantly affected root phenology. Root growth was not driven by soil temperature, and occurred in near-freezing temperatures above the permafrost. Additionally, summer root production appeared to be linked to soil moisture at this relatively dry site, and autumn phenology was not driven by photoperiod as previous studies have suggested. Conclusions Root phenology was not directly driven by temperature in this system, promoting differential above- and belowground phenological responses to warming and herbivore exclusion. Aboveground phenology, one of the most widely measured aspects of climate change, may not represent whole-plant phenology or indicate the timing of whole-plant carbon fluxes as commonly assumed.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Radville, Laura
Post, Eric
Eissenstat, David
author_facet Radville, Laura
Post, Eric
Eissenstat, David
author_sort Radville, Laura
title Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion
title_short Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion
title_full Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion
title_fullStr Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion
title_full_unstemmed Root phenology in an Arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion
title_sort root phenology in an arctic shrub-graminoid community: the effects of long-term warming and herbivore exclusion
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2016
url http://www.climatechangeresponses.com/content/3/1/4
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Global warming
permafrost
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Global warming
permafrost
op_relation http://www.climatechangeresponses.com/content/3/1/4
op_rights Copyright 2016 Radville et al.
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