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Global assessment of experimental climate warming on tundra vegetation: heterogeneity over space and time

Authors :
Thomas A. Day
Patrick J. Webber
Elisabeth J. Cooper
Gregory H. R. Henry
Eric Post
John Harte
Robert G. Björk
Gaius R. Shaver
Philip A. Wookey
Niels Martin Schmidt
Anna Stenström
Kari Klanderud
Gaku Kudo
Laura Siegwart Collier
Anders Michelsen
Ørjan Totland
Anna Maria Fosaa
Frida Keuper
Ulf Molau
Christian Rixen
Isla H. Myers-Smith
Sara Pieper
David S. Hik
Anne Tolvanen
Jeffery M Welker
Tiffany G. Troxler
Anne D. Bjorkman
Ingibjörg S. Jónsdóttir
Saewan Koh
William A. Gould
Jeremy L. May
Simone I. Lang
Frith C. Jarrad
Joel Mercado
Steven F. Oberbauer
Robert D. Hollister
Carl-Henrik Wahren
Luise Hermanutz
Jarngerdur Gretarsdottir
Annika Hofgaard
Julia A. Klein
Terry V. Callaghan
Sarah C. Elmendorf
Johannes H. C. Cornelissen
Clare H. Robinson
Val Loewen
Source :
Ecology Letters. 15:164-175
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Wiley, 2011.

Abstract

35 Abstract Understanding the sensitivity of tundra vegetation to climate warming is critical to forecasting future biodiversity and vegetation feedbacks to climate. In situ warming experiments accelerate climate change on a small scale to forecast responses of local plant communities. Limitations of this approach include the apparent site-specificity of results and uncertainty about the power of short-term studies to anticipate longer term change. We address these issues with a synthesis of 61 experimental warming studies, of up to 20 years duration, in tundra sites worldwide. The response of plant groups to warming often differed with ambient summer temperature, soil moisture and experimental duration. Shrubs increased with warming only where ambient temperature was high, whereas graminoids increased primarily in the coldest study sites. Linear increases in effect size over time were frequently observed. There was little indication of saturating or accelerating effects, as would be predicted if negative or positive vegetation feedbacks were common. These results indicate that tundra vegetation exhibits strong regional variation in response to warming, and that in vulnerable regions, cumulative effects of long-term warming on tundra vegetation - and associated ecosystem consequences - have the potential to be much greater than we have observed to date.

Details

ISSN :
1461023X
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecology Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6b563cb3177dc5b261908aea9ce477de
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1461-0248.2011.01716.x