Palaeo leaf economics reveal a shift in ecosystem function associated with the end-Triassic mass extinction event

Climate change is likely to have altered the ecological functioning of past ecosystems, and is likely to alter functioning in the future; however, the magnitude and direction of such changes are difficult to predict. Here we use a deep-time case study to evaluate the impact of a well-constrained CO2...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Plants
Main Authors: Soh, Wuu K., Wright, Ian J. (R20529), Bacon, Karen L., Lenz, Tanja, Steinthorsdottir, Margret, Parnell, Andrew C., McElwain, Jennifer C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: U.K., Nature Publishing Group 2017
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/nplants.2017.104
https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:61928
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Summary:Climate change is likely to have altered the ecological functioning of past ecosystems, and is likely to alter functioning in the future; however, the magnitude and direction of such changes are difficult to predict. Here we use a deep-time case study to evaluate the impact of a well-constrained CO2-induced global warming event on the ecological functioning of dominant plant communities. We use leaf mass per area (LMA), a widely used trait in modern plant ecology, to infer the palaeoecological strategy of fossil plant taxa. We show that palaeo-LMA can be inferred from fossil leaf cuticles based on a tight relationship between LMA and cuticle thickness observed among extant gymnosperms. Application of this new palaeo-LMA proxy to fossil gymnosperms from East Greenland reveals significant shifts in the dominant ecological strategies of vegetation found across the Triassic–Jurassic transition. Late Triassic forests, dominated by low-LMA taxa with inferred high transpiration rates and short leaf lifespans, were replaced in the Early Jurassic by forests dominated by high-LMA taxa that were likely to have slower metabolic rates. We suggest that extreme CO2-induced global warming selected for taxa with high LMA associated with a stress-tolerant strategy and that adaptive plasticity in leaf functional traits such as LMA contributed to post-warming ecological success.