Potential effects of warming and drying on peatland plant community composition

被引:244
|
作者
Weltzin, JF
Bridgham, SD
Pastor, J
Chen, JQ
Harth, C
机构
[1] Univ Tennessee, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA
[2] Univ Notre Dame, Dept Biol Sci, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA
[3] Univ Minnesota, Nat Resources Res Inst, Duluth, MN 55811 USA
[4] Univ Minnesota, Dept Biol, Duluth, MN 55811 USA
[5] Univ Toledo, Toledo, OH 43606 USA
关键词
climate change; global warming; peatlands; plant cover; soil warming; species composition; water-table; wetlands;
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-2486.2003.00571.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Boreal peatlands may be particularly vulnerable to climate change, because temperature regimes that currently constrain biological activity in these regions are predicted to increase substantially within the next century. Changes in peatland plant community composition in response to climate change may alter nutrient availability, energy budgets, trace gas fluxes, and carbon storage. We investigated plant community response to warming and drying in a field mesocosm experiment in northern Minnesota, USA. Large intact soil monoliths removed from a bog and a fen received three infrared warming treatments crossed with three water-table treatments (n = 3) for five years. Foliar cover of each species was estimated annually. In the bog, increases in soil temperature and decreases in water-table elevation increased cover of shrubs by 50% and decreased cover of graminoids by 50%. The response of shrubs to warming was distinctly species-specific, and ranged from increases (for Andromeda glaucophylla ) to decreases (for Kalmia polifolia ). In the fens, changes in plant cover were driven primarily by changes in water-table elevation, and responses were species- and lifeform-specific: increases in water-table elevation increased cover of graminoids - in particular Carex lasiocarpa and Carex livida - as well as mosses. In contrast, decreases in water-table elevation increased cover of shrubs, in particular A. glaucophylla and Chamaedaphne calyculata . The differential and sometimes opposite response of species and lifeforms to the treatments suggest that the structure and function of both bog and fen plant communities will change - in different directions or at different magnitudes - in response to warming and/or changes in water-table elevation that may accompany regional or global climate change.
引用
收藏
页码:141 / 151
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Large-scale experimental warming reduces soil faunal biodiversity through peatland drying
    Barreto, Carlos
    Conceicao, Pedro Henrique Silva
    de Lima, Estevam Cipriano Araujo
    Stievano, Luis Carlos
    Zeppelini, Douglas
    Kolka, Randall K.
    Hanson, Paul J.
    Lindo, Zoe
    FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2023, 11
  • [22] Geographic differences in effects of experimental warming on ant species diversity and community composition
    Pelini, S. L.
    Diamond, S. E.
    Nichols, L. M.
    Stuble, K. L.
    Ellison, A. M.
    Sanders, N. J.
    Dunn, R. R.
    Gotelli, N. J.
    ECOSPHERE, 2014, 5 (10):
  • [23] Vegetation composition modulates the interaction of climate warming and elevated nitrogen deposition on nitrous oxide flux in a boreal peatland
    Gong, Yu
    Wu, Jianghua
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2021, 27 (21) : 5588 - 5598
  • [24] Responses of Plant Community Composition and Biomass Production to Warming and Nitrogen Deposition in a Temperate Meadow Ecosystem
    Zhang, Tao
    Guo, Rui
    Gao, Song
    Guo, Jixun
    Sun, Wei
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (04):
  • [25] Negative effects of climate warming on red-listed boreal peatland plant species can be mitigated through restoration
    Christiani, Priscillia
    Isoaho, Aleksi
    Elo, Merja
    Pakkila, Lassi
    Marttila, Hannu
    Aalto, Juha
    Hjort, Jan
    Tolvanen, Anne
    Rana, Parvez
    Rasanen, Aleksi
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2025, 306
  • [26] Shifts in a bacterial community composition of a mesotrophic peatland after wildfire
    S. E. Belova
    I. S. Kulichevskaya
    N. P. Akhmet’eva
    S. N. Dedysh
    Microbiology, 2014, 83 : 813 - 819
  • [27] Shifts in a Bacterial Community Composition of a Mesotrophic Peatland after Wildfire
    Belova, S. E.
    Kulichevskaya, I. S.
    Akhmet'eva, N. P.
    Dedysh, S. N.
    MICROBIOLOGY, 2014, 83 (06) : 813 - 819
  • [28] Experimental soil warming shifts the fungal community composition at the alpine treeline
    Solly, Emily F.
    Lindahl, Bjorn D.
    Dawes, Melissa A.
    Peter, Martina
    Souza, Romulo C.
    Rixen, Christian
    Hagedorn, Frank
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2017, 215 (02) : 766 - 778
  • [29] Effects of Gradient Warming on Carbon and Water Fluxes in Zoige Plateau Peatland
    Yu, Xiaoshun
    Hao, Yanbin
    Yan, Zhongqing
    Li, Yong
    Yang, Ao
    Niu, Yuechuan
    Liu, Jinming
    Kang, Enze
    Zhang, Kerou
    Yan, Liang
    Zhuang, Weirong
    Zhang, Xiaodong
    Kang, Xiaoming
    WATER, 2025, 17 (02)
  • [30] The effects of climate warming and disturbance on the colonization potential of ornamental alien plant species
    Haeuser, Emily
    Dawson, Wayne
    van Kleunen, Mark
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2017, 105 (06) : 1698 - 1708