Data and code from: Geomorphological processes shape plant community traits in the Arctic

Aim Geomorphological processes profoundly affect plant establishment and distributions, but their influence on functional traits is insufficiently understood. Here, we unveil trait-geomorphology relationships in Arctic plant communities. Location High-Arctic Svalbard, low-Arctic Greenland, and sub-A...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kemppinen, Julia, Niittynen, Pekka, Happonen, Konsta, le Roux, Peter C., Aalto, Juha, Hjort, Jan, Maliniemi, Tuija, Karjalainen, Olli, Rautakoski, Helena, Luoto, Miska
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/6410638
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6410638
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Summary:Aim Geomorphological processes profoundly affect plant establishment and distributions, but their influence on functional traits is insufficiently understood. Here, we unveil trait-geomorphology relationships in Arctic plant communities. Location High-Arctic Svalbard, low-Arctic Greenland, and sub-Arctic Fennoscandia. Time period 2011-2018 Major taxa studied Vascular plants Methods We collected field-quantified data on vegetation, geomorphological processes, microclimate, and soil properties from 5280 plots and 200 species across the three Arctic regions. We combined these data with database trait records to relate local plant community trait composition to dominant geomorphological processes of the Arctic, namely cryoturbation, deflation, fluvial processes, and solifluction. We investigated the relationship between plant functional traits and geomorphological processes using hierarchical generalised additive modelling. Results Our results demonstrate that community-level traits are related to geomorphological processes, with cryoturbation most strongly influencing both structural and leaf economic traits. These results were consistent across regions, suggesting a coherent biome-level trait response to geomorphological processes. Main conclusions The results indicate that geomorphological processes shape plant community traits in the Arctic. We provide empirical evidence for the existence of generalisable relationships between plant functional traits and geomorphological processes. The results indicate that the relationships are consistent across these three distinct tundra regions and that geomorphological processes should be considered in future investigations of functional traits. Kemppinen, Niittynen, Happonen, le Roux, Aalto, Hjort, Maliniemi, Karjalainen, Rautakoski & Luoto. Provisionally accepted. Geomorphological processes shape plant community traits in the Arctic. Global Ecology and Biogeography. These are the data and code from Kemppinen et al. (Provisionally accepted).