Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits

Aim Global warming is predicted to shift distributions of mountain species upwards, driven by a release from climatic restrictions at their upper distribution limit and increased biotic pressure at their lower distribution limit. In alpine ecosystems, which are characterized by large microclimatic d...

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Main Authors: Kulonen, Aino, Imboden, Rachel A., Rixen, Christian, Maier, Sheila B., Wipf, Sonja
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.109320
https://boris.unibe.ch/109320/
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spelling ftdatacite:10.7892/boris.109320 2023-05-15T18:04:32+02:00 Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits Kulonen, Aino Imboden, Rachel A. Rixen, Christian Maier, Sheila B. Wipf, Sonja 2018 application/pdf https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.109320 https://boris.unibe.ch/109320/ en eng Wiley info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess 580 Plants Botany Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2018 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.109320 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Aim Global warming is predicted to shift distributions of mountain species upwards, driven by a release from climatic restrictions at their upper distribution limit and increased biotic pressure at their lower distribution limit. In alpine ecosystems, which are characterized by large microclimatic diversity and sparse vegetation cover, the relative importance of abiotic and biotic drivers for species distribution is poorly understood. To disentangle abiotic and biotic mechanisms affecting distributions of alpine species, we investigated how alpine plant species with differing elevational ranges and frequency trends over the past century differ in their microhabitat distribution, and how they respond to neighbouring vegetation. Location A total of 11 summits (2635—3410 m a.s.l.) in SE-Switzerland. Methods We quantified the microscale abundance of 12 species in relation to biogeographic (frequency trend, i.e., change in occurrences over the past century, and elevational range on summits) and local microhabitat characteristics (temperature, substrate type). We assessed species size traits in relation to neighbouring vegetation characteristics to investigate possible neighbour interactions. Results Species with increasing frequency on summits over the past century were most abundant on scree and warmer slopes. Species with negative or stable frequency trends on summits were more abundant on organic soil and colder slopes. The preferred microhabitats of the latter were rarest overall, decreased with increasing elevation, and had the most competitive neighbours. Size of one high-alpine specialist, Ranunculus glacialis was negatively related to cover of neighbouring vegetation, whereas other species showed no response to neighbours. Main conclusions Long-term frequency trends of species correlate with their microhabitat association. Species with most negative frequency trends show preferences for the rarest microhabitat conditions, where they likely experience higher competitive pressure in a warming climate. This finding emphasizes the importance of characterizing microhabitat associations and microclimatic diversity to assess present and future distributions of alpine plant species. Text Ranunculus glacialis DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic 580 Plants Botany
spellingShingle 580 Plants Botany
Kulonen, Aino
Imboden, Rachel A.
Rixen, Christian
Maier, Sheila B.
Wipf, Sonja
Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits
topic_facet 580 Plants Botany
description Aim Global warming is predicted to shift distributions of mountain species upwards, driven by a release from climatic restrictions at their upper distribution limit and increased biotic pressure at their lower distribution limit. In alpine ecosystems, which are characterized by large microclimatic diversity and sparse vegetation cover, the relative importance of abiotic and biotic drivers for species distribution is poorly understood. To disentangle abiotic and biotic mechanisms affecting distributions of alpine species, we investigated how alpine plant species with differing elevational ranges and frequency trends over the past century differ in their microhabitat distribution, and how they respond to neighbouring vegetation. Location A total of 11 summits (2635—3410 m a.s.l.) in SE-Switzerland. Methods We quantified the microscale abundance of 12 species in relation to biogeographic (frequency trend, i.e., change in occurrences over the past century, and elevational range on summits) and local microhabitat characteristics (temperature, substrate type). We assessed species size traits in relation to neighbouring vegetation characteristics to investigate possible neighbour interactions. Results Species with increasing frequency on summits over the past century were most abundant on scree and warmer slopes. Species with negative or stable frequency trends on summits were more abundant on organic soil and colder slopes. The preferred microhabitats of the latter were rarest overall, decreased with increasing elevation, and had the most competitive neighbours. Size of one high-alpine specialist, Ranunculus glacialis was negatively related to cover of neighbouring vegetation, whereas other species showed no response to neighbours. Main conclusions Long-term frequency trends of species correlate with their microhabitat association. Species with most negative frequency trends show preferences for the rarest microhabitat conditions, where they likely experience higher competitive pressure in a warming climate. This finding emphasizes the importance of characterizing microhabitat associations and microclimatic diversity to assess present and future distributions of alpine plant species.
format Text
author Kulonen, Aino
Imboden, Rachel A.
Rixen, Christian
Maier, Sheila B.
Wipf, Sonja
author_facet Kulonen, Aino
Imboden, Rachel A.
Rixen, Christian
Maier, Sheila B.
Wipf, Sonja
author_sort Kulonen, Aino
title Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits
title_short Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits
title_full Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits
title_fullStr Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits
title_full_unstemmed Enough space in a warmer world? Microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits
title_sort enough space in a warmer world? microhabitat diversity and small-scale distribution of alpine plants on mountain summits
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2018
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.109320
https://boris.unibe.ch/109320/
genre Ranunculus glacialis
genre_facet Ranunculus glacialis
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.109320
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