How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change

Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations have caused higher air temperatures in the Arctic. Because arctic organisms are temperature limited, warmer conditions lead to higher decomposition and nutrient cycling rates by soil microorganisms resulting in positive feedbacks; more CO2 i...

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Main Author: Johnson, David R.
Other Authors: Gough, Laura
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Biology 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10106/1048
https://www.uta.edu/ra/real/editprofile.php?onlyview=1&pid=83
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spelling ftunivtexarling:oai:rc.library.uta.edu:10106/1048 2023-06-06T11:50:23+02:00 How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change Johnson, David R. Gough, Laura July 2008 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10106/1048 https://www.uta.edu/ra/real/editprofile.php?onlyview=1&pid=83 EN eng Biology DISS-2153 http://hdl.handle.net/10106/1048 https://www.uta.edu/ra/real/editprofile.php?onlyview=1&pid=83 Link to Research Profiles Ph.D. 2008 ftunivtexarling 2023-04-13T18:54:34Z Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations have caused higher air temperatures in the Arctic. Because arctic organisms are temperature limited, warmer conditions lead to higher decomposition and nutrient cycling rates by soil microorganisms resulting in positive feedbacks; more CO2 is released from warmer soils thus increasing global atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Higher decomposition and nutrient cycling rates increase soil nutrient availability for plants resulting in increased net primary productivity (NPP) and shifts in community structure. If these "warmer" communities contain more woody shrubs, they may store more carbon in plant tissue, potentially offsetting increases in CO2 from decomposition. However, little is known about how higher trophic levels affect plants under these conditions. I studied how mammalian herbivores affect individual plant growth, community structure and decomposition in two common arctic plant communities in northern Alaska that experienced ten years of experimental fertilization and herbivore exclosures in a factorial design. While fertilization increased growth of individual plants, increased community NPP and shifted species composition, the effects of herbivores were different in each community. In moist acidic tussock (MAT) tundra, long-term fertilization and herbivory decreased the growth of individual graminoids and increased deciduous shrub growth. Indeed, the graminoid Eriophorum vaginatum in MAT was not tolerant of herbivory regardless of fertilization. In contrast, graminoid growth in dry heath tundra (DH) increased with fertilization and was not affected by herbivores, while herbivores suppressed increases from fertilization in deciduous shrub growth. The DH graminoid Hierochloe alpina growing with fertilization was tolerant of and not strongly affected by herbivores. Additionally, I found evidence that the effects of fertilization and herbivores on individual growth scaled up to affect community structure in both communities. With higher soil ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic Climate change Eriophorum Tundra Alaska University of Texas Arlington: UTA ResearchCommons Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Texas Arlington: UTA ResearchCommons
op_collection_id ftunivtexarling
language English
description Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations have caused higher air temperatures in the Arctic. Because arctic organisms are temperature limited, warmer conditions lead to higher decomposition and nutrient cycling rates by soil microorganisms resulting in positive feedbacks; more CO2 is released from warmer soils thus increasing global atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Higher decomposition and nutrient cycling rates increase soil nutrient availability for plants resulting in increased net primary productivity (NPP) and shifts in community structure. If these "warmer" communities contain more woody shrubs, they may store more carbon in plant tissue, potentially offsetting increases in CO2 from decomposition. However, little is known about how higher trophic levels affect plants under these conditions. I studied how mammalian herbivores affect individual plant growth, community structure and decomposition in two common arctic plant communities in northern Alaska that experienced ten years of experimental fertilization and herbivore exclosures in a factorial design. While fertilization increased growth of individual plants, increased community NPP and shifted species composition, the effects of herbivores were different in each community. In moist acidic tussock (MAT) tundra, long-term fertilization and herbivory decreased the growth of individual graminoids and increased deciduous shrub growth. Indeed, the graminoid Eriophorum vaginatum in MAT was not tolerant of herbivory regardless of fertilization. In contrast, graminoid growth in dry heath tundra (DH) increased with fertilization and was not affected by herbivores, while herbivores suppressed increases from fertilization in deciduous shrub growth. The DH graminoid Hierochloe alpina growing with fertilization was tolerant of and not strongly affected by herbivores. Additionally, I found evidence that the effects of fertilization and herbivores on individual growth scaled up to affect community structure in both communities. With higher soil ...
author2 Gough, Laura
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Johnson, David R.
spellingShingle Johnson, David R.
How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change
author_facet Johnson, David R.
author_sort Johnson, David R.
title How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change
title_short How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change
title_full How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change
title_fullStr How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change
title_full_unstemmed How Herbivores Affect Plant Growth, Community Structure And Litter Decomposition In Alaskan Tundra: Implications For Responses To Climate Change
title_sort how herbivores affect plant growth, community structure and litter decomposition in alaskan tundra: implications for responses to climate change
publisher Biology
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10106/1048
https://www.uta.edu/ra/real/editprofile.php?onlyview=1&pid=83
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Eriophorum
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Eriophorum
Tundra
Alaska
op_relation DISS-2153
http://hdl.handle.net/10106/1048
https://www.uta.edu/ra/real/editprofile.php?onlyview=1&pid=83
Link to Research Profiles
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