Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems

Despite the likely importance of inter-year dynamics of plant production and consumer biota for driving community- and ecosystem-level processes, very few studies have explored how and why these dynamics vary across contrasting ecosystems. We utilized a well characterized system of 30 lake islands i...

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Published in:Ecology
Main Authors: Wardle, David A., Jonsson, Micael, Kalela-Brundin, Maarit, Lagerström, Anna, Yeates, Gregor, Bardgett, Richard, Nilsson, Marie-Charlotte
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/7/wardle_d_130221.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1890/11-0930.1
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spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:9457 2023-05-15T17:45:05+02:00 Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems Wardle, David A. Jonsson, Micael Kalela-Brundin, Maarit Lagerström, Anna Yeates, Gregor Bardgett, Richard Nilsson, Marie-Charlotte 2012 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/7/wardle_d_130221.pdf https://doi.org/10.1890/11-0930.1 en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/7/wardle_d_130221.pdf Wardle, David A. and Jonsson, Micael and Kalela-Brundin, Maarit and Lagerström, Anna and Yeates, Gregor and Bardgett, Richard and Nilsson, Marie-Charlotte (2012). Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems. Ecology. 93 :3 , 521-531 [Research article] Forest Science Soil Science Research article PeerReviewed 2012 ftslunivuppsala https://doi.org/10.1890/11-0930.1 2022-11-10T17:13:50Z Despite the likely importance of inter-year dynamics of plant production and consumer biota for driving community- and ecosystem-level processes, very few studies have explored how and why these dynamics vary across contrasting ecosystems. We utilized a well characterized system of 30 lake islands in the boreal forest zone of northern Sweden across which soil fertility and productivity vary considerably, with larger islands being more fertile and productive than smaller ones. In this system we assessed the inter-year dynamics of several measures of plant production and the soil microbial community (primary consumers in the decomposer food web) for each of 9 years, and soil microfaunal groups (secondary and tertiary consumers) for each of 6 of those years. We found that for measures of plant production and each of the three consumer trophic levels, inter-year dynamics were strongly affected by island size. Further, many variables were strongly affected by island size (and thus bottom-up regulation by soil fertility and resources) for some years but none in others, most likely due to inter-year variation in climatic conditions. For each of the plant and microbial variables for which we had 9 years of data, we also determined the inter-year coefficient of variation (CV), an inverse measure of stability. We found that CVs of some measures of plant productivity were greater on large islands while those of other measures were greater on smaller islands; CVs of microbial variables were unresponsive to island7 size. We also found that the effects of island size on the temporal dynamics of some variables were related to inter-year variability of macroclimatic variables. As such, our results show that the inter year dynamics of both plant productivity and decomposer biota across each of three trophic levels, as well as the inter-year stability of plant productivity, differs greatly across contrasting ecosystems, with potentially important but largely overlooked implications for community and ecosystem processes. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Sweden Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Ecology 93 3 521 531
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
language English
topic Forest Science
Soil Science
spellingShingle Forest Science
Soil Science
Wardle, David A.
Jonsson, Micael
Kalela-Brundin, Maarit
Lagerström, Anna
Yeates, Gregor
Bardgett, Richard
Nilsson, Marie-Charlotte
Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems
topic_facet Forest Science
Soil Science
description Despite the likely importance of inter-year dynamics of plant production and consumer biota for driving community- and ecosystem-level processes, very few studies have explored how and why these dynamics vary across contrasting ecosystems. We utilized a well characterized system of 30 lake islands in the boreal forest zone of northern Sweden across which soil fertility and productivity vary considerably, with larger islands being more fertile and productive than smaller ones. In this system we assessed the inter-year dynamics of several measures of plant production and the soil microbial community (primary consumers in the decomposer food web) for each of 9 years, and soil microfaunal groups (secondary and tertiary consumers) for each of 6 of those years. We found that for measures of plant production and each of the three consumer trophic levels, inter-year dynamics were strongly affected by island size. Further, many variables were strongly affected by island size (and thus bottom-up regulation by soil fertility and resources) for some years but none in others, most likely due to inter-year variation in climatic conditions. For each of the plant and microbial variables for which we had 9 years of data, we also determined the inter-year coefficient of variation (CV), an inverse measure of stability. We found that CVs of some measures of plant productivity were greater on large islands while those of other measures were greater on smaller islands; CVs of microbial variables were unresponsive to island7 size. We also found that the effects of island size on the temporal dynamics of some variables were related to inter-year variability of macroclimatic variables. As such, our results show that the inter year dynamics of both plant productivity and decomposer biota across each of three trophic levels, as well as the inter-year stability of plant productivity, differs greatly across contrasting ecosystems, with potentially important but largely overlooked implications for community and ecosystem processes.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wardle, David A.
Jonsson, Micael
Kalela-Brundin, Maarit
Lagerström, Anna
Yeates, Gregor
Bardgett, Richard
Nilsson, Marie-Charlotte
author_facet Wardle, David A.
Jonsson, Micael
Kalela-Brundin, Maarit
Lagerström, Anna
Yeates, Gregor
Bardgett, Richard
Nilsson, Marie-Charlotte
author_sort Wardle, David A.
title Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems
title_short Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems
title_full Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems
title_fullStr Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems
title_sort drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems
publishDate 2012
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/7/wardle_d_130221.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1890/11-0930.1
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/9457/7/wardle_d_130221.pdf
Wardle, David A. and Jonsson, Micael and Kalela-Brundin, Maarit and Lagerström, Anna and Yeates, Gregor and Bardgett, Richard and Nilsson, Marie-Charlotte (2012). Drivers of inter-year variability of plant production and decomposers across contrasting island ecosystems. Ecology. 93 :3 , 521-531 [Research article]
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1890/11-0930.1
container_title Ecology
container_volume 93
container_issue 3
container_start_page 521
op_container_end_page 531
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