Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum

The study of plant trait spectra and their association with trade-offs in resource use strategy has greatly advanced our understanding of vascular plant function, yet trait spectra remain poorly studied in bryophytes, particularly outside of the Sphagnum genus. Here, we measured 25 traits related to...

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Main Authors: Grau-Andrés, Roger, Kardol, Paul, Gundale, Michael
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/1/grau-andres-r-et-al-20221018.pdf
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spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:29301 2023-05-15T15:12:41+02:00 Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum Grau-Andrés, Roger Kardol, Paul Gundale, Michael 2022 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/1/grau-andres-r-et-al-20221018.pdf en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/1/grau-andres-r-et-al-20221018.pdf Grau-Andrés, Roger and Kardol, Paul and Gundale, Michael (2022). Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum. Journal of Ecology. 110 :10 , 2493-2506 [Research article] Ecology Research article NonPeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2022 ftslunivuppsala 2022-10-20T16:13:51Z The study of plant trait spectra and their association with trade-offs in resource use strategy has greatly advanced our understanding of vascular plant function, yet trait spectra remain poorly studied in bryophytes, particularly outside of the Sphagnum genus. Here, we measured 25 traits related to carbon, nutrient and water conservation in 60 moss canopies (each dominated by one of 15 moss species) across diverse boreal forest habitats and used bi-variate correlations and multi-variate analyses to assess trait coordination and trait spectra. We found substantial trait coordination along a main principal components axis driven by trade-offs in carbon, nutrient and water conservation strategies. Along this trait spectrum, traits varied from resource-acquisitive at one end (e.g. high maximum photosynthetic capacity, high tissue nitrogen content, low water-holding capacity) to resource-conservative at the other end, in line with resource economics theory. Traits related to carbon turnover (photosynthesis and respiration rates, litter decomposability) were positively related to nitrogen content and to desiccation rates, in line with global trait spectra in vascular plants. However, architectural traits of the moss shoots and of the moss canopy were generally unrelated to the main axis of trait variation and formed a secondary axis of trait variation, contrary to what is observed for vascular plants. Resource-conservative trait spectra dominated in moss canopies from open and wet habitats (i.e. mires), indicating that high irradiance and possibly high moisture fluctuation induce a resource-conservative trait strategy in mosses. Synthesis. Our work suggests that trait relationships that are well established for vascular plants can be extended for bryophytes as well. Bryophyte trait spectra can be powerful tools to improve our understanding of ecosystem processes in moss-dominated ecosystems, such as boreal or arctic environments, where bryophyte communities exert strong control on nutrient and carbon cycling. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
language English
topic Ecology
spellingShingle Ecology
Grau-Andrés, Roger
Kardol, Paul
Gundale, Michael
Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum
topic_facet Ecology
description The study of plant trait spectra and their association with trade-offs in resource use strategy has greatly advanced our understanding of vascular plant function, yet trait spectra remain poorly studied in bryophytes, particularly outside of the Sphagnum genus. Here, we measured 25 traits related to carbon, nutrient and water conservation in 60 moss canopies (each dominated by one of 15 moss species) across diverse boreal forest habitats and used bi-variate correlations and multi-variate analyses to assess trait coordination and trait spectra. We found substantial trait coordination along a main principal components axis driven by trade-offs in carbon, nutrient and water conservation strategies. Along this trait spectrum, traits varied from resource-acquisitive at one end (e.g. high maximum photosynthetic capacity, high tissue nitrogen content, low water-holding capacity) to resource-conservative at the other end, in line with resource economics theory. Traits related to carbon turnover (photosynthesis and respiration rates, litter decomposability) were positively related to nitrogen content and to desiccation rates, in line with global trait spectra in vascular plants. However, architectural traits of the moss shoots and of the moss canopy were generally unrelated to the main axis of trait variation and formed a secondary axis of trait variation, contrary to what is observed for vascular plants. Resource-conservative trait spectra dominated in moss canopies from open and wet habitats (i.e. mires), indicating that high irradiance and possibly high moisture fluctuation induce a resource-conservative trait strategy in mosses. Synthesis. Our work suggests that trait relationships that are well established for vascular plants can be extended for bryophytes as well. Bryophyte trait spectra can be powerful tools to improve our understanding of ecosystem processes in moss-dominated ecosystems, such as boreal or arctic environments, where bryophyte communities exert strong control on nutrient and carbon cycling.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Grau-Andrés, Roger
Kardol, Paul
Gundale, Michael
author_facet Grau-Andrés, Roger
Kardol, Paul
Gundale, Michael
author_sort Grau-Andrés, Roger
title Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum
title_short Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum
title_full Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum
title_fullStr Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum
title_full_unstemmed Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum
title_sort trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum
publishDate 2022
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/1/grau-andres-r-et-al-20221018.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29301/1/grau-andres-r-et-al-20221018.pdf
Grau-Andrés, Roger and Kardol, Paul and Gundale, Michael (2022). Trait coordination in boreal mosses reveals a bryophyte economics spectrum. Journal of Ecology. 110 :10 , 2493-2506 [Research article]
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