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Land use modulates resistance of grasslands against future climate and inter-annual climate variability in a large field experiment

Authors :
Korell, Lotte
Andrzejak, Martin
Berger, Sigrid
Durka, Walter
Haider, S.
Hensen, I.
Herion, Yva Helena
Höfner, Johannes Bernhard Franz
Kindermann, L.
Klotz, Stefan
Knight, Tiffany
Linstädter, A.
Madaj, Anna-Maria
Merbach, Ines
Michalski, Stefan
Plos, C.
Roscher, Christiane
Schädler, Martin
Welk, E.
Auge, Harald
Korell, Lotte
Andrzejak, Martin
Berger, Sigrid
Durka, Walter
Haider, S.
Hensen, I.
Herion, Yva Helena
Höfner, Johannes Bernhard Franz
Kindermann, L.
Klotz, Stefan
Knight, Tiffany
Linstädter, A.
Madaj, Anna-Maria
Merbach, Ines
Michalski, Stefan
Plos, C.
Roscher, Christiane
Schädler, Martin
Welk, E.
Auge, Harald
Source :
ISSN: 1354-1013
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Climate and land-use change are key drivers of global change. Full-factorial field experiments in which both drivers are manipulated are essential to understand and predict their potentially interactive effects on the structure and functioning of grassland ecosystems. Here, we present 8 years of data on grassland dynamics from the Global Change Experimental Facility in Central Germany. On large experimental plots, temperature and seasonal patterns of precipitation are manipulated by superimposing regional climate model projections onto background climate variability. Climate manipulation is factorially crossed with agricultural land-use scenarios, including intensively used meadows and extensively used (i.e., low-intensity) meadows and pastures. Inter-annual variation of background climate during our study years was high, including three of the driest years on record for our region. The effects of this temporal variability far exceeded the effects of the experimentally imposed climate change on plant species diversity and productivity, especially in the intensively used grasslands sown with only a few grass cultivars. These changes in productivity and diversity in response to alterations in climate were due to immigrant species replacing the target forage cultivars. This shift from forage cultivars to immigrant species may impose additional economic costs in terms of a decreasing forage value and the need for more frequent management measures. In contrast, the extensively used grasslands showed weaker responses to both experimentally manipulated future climate and inter-annual climate variability, suggesting that these diverse grasslands are more resistant to climate change than intensively used, species-poor grasslands. We therefore conclude that a lower management intensity of agricultural grasslands, associated with a higher plant diversity, can stabilize primary productivity under climate change.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 1354-1013
Notes :
ISSN: 1354-1013, Global Change Biology 30 (7);; e17418, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1450167522
Document Type :
Electronic Resource