Ecological responses of plant species and communities to climate warming: upward shift or range filling processes?

被引:0
|
作者
Nicoletta Cannone
Sandro Pignatti
机构
[1] Insubria University,Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences
[2] University Roma “La Sapienza”,Department of Environmental Biology
来源
Climatic Change | 2014年 / 123卷
关键词
Species Richness; Community Type; Upward Shift; Alpine Grassland; Extinct Species;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The fate of alpine species in response to climate warming is still unclear. We analyze effects of climate warming on the composition of alpine plants communities and unravel the range filling of communities within a belt from long-term true upward shift processes. In the European Alps we re-sampled in 2003 the vegetation at sites studied in 1953 and analyzed the changes at intra- and inter-community level. Since 1953 all communities experienced a high species turnover, leading to an overall increase in species richness as new species exceeded species losses. The dominant species mainly declined allowing the potential expansion of competitors and/or of new species. The main recruitment sources are neighbor communities within the same elevation belt performing biotic exchanges with other plant communities in the same altitudinal belts. The changes of species distribution curves with elevation emphasized that more than half of the most widespread persisting species exhibited downward shifts instead of upward shifts. Upward shifts from lower elevation belts and of nonnative species were very limited. One third of the persisting species declined and could be used as a proxy to measure the extinction debt. Therefore the fate of plant communities will depend on the ability of the original species to persist and fill the available ecological gaps. Species persistence may be crucial in developing adaptation and environmental protection strategies.
引用
收藏
页码:201 / 214
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Warming experiments underpredict plant phenological responses to climate change
    Wolkovich, E. M.
    Cook, B. I.
    Allen, J. M.
    Crimmins, T. M.
    Betancourt, J. L.
    Travers, S. E.
    Pau, S.
    Regetz, J.
    Davies, T. J.
    Kraft, N. J. B.
    Ault, T. R.
    Bolmgren, K.
    Mazer, S. J.
    McCabe, G. J.
    McGill, B. J.
    Parmesan, C.
    Salamin, N.
    Schwartz, M. D.
    Cleland, E. E.
    [J]. NATURE, 2012, 485 (7399) : 494 - 497
  • [22] Warming experiments underpredict plant phenological responses to climate change
    E. M. Wolkovich
    B. I. Cook
    J. M. Allen
    T. M. Crimmins
    J. L. Betancourt
    S. E. Travers
    S. Pau
    J. Regetz
    T. J. Davies
    N. J. B. Kraft
    T. R. Ault
    K. Bolmgren
    S. J. Mazer
    G. J. McCabe
    B. J. McGill
    C. Parmesan
    N. Salamin
    M. D. Schwartz
    E. E. Cleland
    [J]. Nature, 2012, 485 : 494 - 497
  • [23] Rapid Responses of Winter Aphid-Parasitoid Communities to Climate Warming
    Tougeron, Kevin
    Damien, Maxime
    Le Lann, Cecile
    Brodeur, Jacques
    van Baaren, Joan
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 6
  • [24] Tundra Soil Viruses Mediate Responses of Microbial Communities to Climate Warming
    Ji, Mengzhi
    Fan, Xiangyu
    Cornell, Carolyn R.
    Zhang, Ya
    Yuan, Mengting Maggie
    Tian, Zhen
    Sun, Kaili
    Gao, Rongfeng
    Liu, Yang
    Zhou, Jizhong
    [J]. MBIO, 2023, 14 (02):
  • [25] Community and species-specific responses of plant traits to 23 years of experimental warming across subarctic tundra plant communities
    Baruah, Gaurav
    Molau, Ulf
    Bai, Yang
    Alatalo, Juha M.
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [26] Community and species-specific responses of plant traits to 23 years of experimental warming across subarctic tundra plant communities
    Gaurav Baruah
    Ulf Molau
    Yang Bai
    Juha M. Alatalo
    [J]. Scientific Reports, 7
  • [27] Plants, Birds and Butterflies: Short-Term Responses of Species Communities to Climate Warming Vary by Taxon and with Altitude
    Roth, Tobias
    Plattner, Matthias
    Amrhein, Valentin
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (01):
  • [28] Exploring the compass of potential changes induced by climate warming in plant communities
    Ferrarini, Alessandro
    Alatalo, Juha M.
    Gervasoni, David
    Foggi, Bruno
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL COMPLEXITY, 2017, 29 : 1 - 9
  • [29] The upward shift in altitude of pine mistletoe (Viscum album ssp austriacum) in Switzerland -: the result of climate warming?
    Dobbertin, M
    Hilker, N
    Rebetez, M
    Zimmermann, NE
    Wohlgemuth, T
    Rigling, A
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY, 2005, 50 (01) : 40 - 47
  • [30] Microclimates buffer the responses of plant communities to climate change
    Maclean, Ilya M. D.
    Hopkins, John J.
    Bennie, Jonathan
    Lawson, Callum R.
    Wilson, Robert J.
    [J]. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2015, 24 (11): : 1340 - 1350