Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change

We studied the impact of simulated global change on a high alpine meadow plant community. Specifically, we examined whether short-term (5 years) responses are good predictors for medium-term (7 years) changes in the system by applying a factorial warming and nutrient manipulation to 20 plots in Latn...

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Published in:PeerJ
Main Authors: Alatalo, Juha M., Little, Chelsea, J., Jägerbrand, Annika K., Molau, Ulf
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Department of Ecology and Genetics, Uppsala University, Visby, Sweden 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-40281
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.406
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spelling ftjoenkoepinguni:oai:DiVA.org:hj-40281 2023-09-26T15:14:44+02:00 Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change Alatalo, Juha M. Little, Chelsea, J. Jägerbrand, Annika K. Molau, Ulf 2014 application/pdf http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-40281 https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.406 eng eng Department of Ecology and Genetics, Uppsala University, Visby, Sweden Statens väg- och transportforskningsinstitut, Miljö, MILJÖ Göteborgs Universitet PeerJ, 2014, 2, orcid:0000-0001-5322-9827 http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-40281 doi:10.7717/peerj.406 PMID 24883260 ISI:000347608100010 Scopus 2-s2.0-84903852485 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Vegetation Global warming Impact study Environmental Sciences Miljövetenskap Article in journal info:eu-repo/semantics/article text 2014 ftjoenkoepinguni https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.406 2023-08-30T22:35:58Z We studied the impact of simulated global change on a high alpine meadow plant community. Specifically, we examined whether short-term (5 years) responses are good predictors for medium-term (7 years) changes in the system by applying a factorial warming and nutrient manipulation to 20 plots in Latnjajaure, subarctic Sweden. Seven years of experimental warming and nutrient enhancement caused dramatic shifts in dominance hierarchies in response to the nutrient and the combined warming and nutrient enhancement treatments. Dominance hierarchies in the meadow moved from a community being dominated by cushion plants, deciduous, and evergreen shrubs to a community being dominated by grasses, sedges, and forbs. Short-term responses were shown to be inconsistent in their ability to predict medium-term responses for most functional groups, however, grasses showed a consistent and very substantial increase in response to nutrient addition over the seven years. The non-linear responses over time point out the importance of longer-term studies with repeated measurements to be able to better predict future changes. Forecasted changes to temperature and nutrient availability have implications for trophic interactions, and may ultimately influence the access to and palatability of the forage for grazers. Depending on what anthropogenic change will be most pronounced in the future (increase in nutrient deposits, warming, or a combination of them both), different shifts in community dominance hierarchies may occur. Generally, this study supports the productivity–diversity relationship found across arctic habitats, with community diversity peaking in mid-productivity systems and degrading as nutrient availability increases further. This is likely due the increasing competition in plant–plant interactions and the shifting dominance structure with grasses taking over the experimental plots, suggesting that global change could have high costs to biodiversity in the Arctic. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Global warming Subarctic Jönköping Univ.: Publications (DiVA) Arctic Latnjajaure ENVELOPE(18.485,18.485,68.359,68.359) PeerJ 2 e406
institution Open Polar
collection Jönköping Univ.: Publications (DiVA)
op_collection_id ftjoenkoepinguni
language English
topic Vegetation
Global warming
Impact study
Environmental Sciences
Miljövetenskap
spellingShingle Vegetation
Global warming
Impact study
Environmental Sciences
Miljövetenskap
Alatalo, Juha M.
Little, Chelsea, J.
Jägerbrand, Annika K.
Molau, Ulf
Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change
topic_facet Vegetation
Global warming
Impact study
Environmental Sciences
Miljövetenskap
description We studied the impact of simulated global change on a high alpine meadow plant community. Specifically, we examined whether short-term (5 years) responses are good predictors for medium-term (7 years) changes in the system by applying a factorial warming and nutrient manipulation to 20 plots in Latnjajaure, subarctic Sweden. Seven years of experimental warming and nutrient enhancement caused dramatic shifts in dominance hierarchies in response to the nutrient and the combined warming and nutrient enhancement treatments. Dominance hierarchies in the meadow moved from a community being dominated by cushion plants, deciduous, and evergreen shrubs to a community being dominated by grasses, sedges, and forbs. Short-term responses were shown to be inconsistent in their ability to predict medium-term responses for most functional groups, however, grasses showed a consistent and very substantial increase in response to nutrient addition over the seven years. The non-linear responses over time point out the importance of longer-term studies with repeated measurements to be able to better predict future changes. Forecasted changes to temperature and nutrient availability have implications for trophic interactions, and may ultimately influence the access to and palatability of the forage for grazers. Depending on what anthropogenic change will be most pronounced in the future (increase in nutrient deposits, warming, or a combination of them both), different shifts in community dominance hierarchies may occur. Generally, this study supports the productivity–diversity relationship found across arctic habitats, with community diversity peaking in mid-productivity systems and degrading as nutrient availability increases further. This is likely due the increasing competition in plant–plant interactions and the shifting dominance structure with grasses taking over the experimental plots, suggesting that global change could have high costs to biodiversity in the Arctic.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Alatalo, Juha M.
Little, Chelsea, J.
Jägerbrand, Annika K.
Molau, Ulf
author_facet Alatalo, Juha M.
Little, Chelsea, J.
Jägerbrand, Annika K.
Molau, Ulf
author_sort Alatalo, Juha M.
title Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change
title_short Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change
title_full Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change
title_fullStr Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change
title_full_unstemmed Dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change
title_sort dominance hierarchies, diversity and species richness of vascular plants in an alpine meadow: contrasting short and medium term responses to simulated global change
publisher Department of Ecology and Genetics, Uppsala University, Visby, Sweden
publishDate 2014
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-40281
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.406
long_lat ENVELOPE(18.485,18.485,68.359,68.359)
geographic Arctic
Latnjajaure
geographic_facet Arctic
Latnjajaure
genre Arctic
Global warming
Subarctic
genre_facet Arctic
Global warming
Subarctic
op_relation PeerJ, 2014, 2,
orcid:0000-0001-5322-9827
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-40281
doi:10.7717/peerj.406
PMID 24883260
ISI:000347608100010
Scopus 2-s2.0-84903852485
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.406
container_title PeerJ
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