Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountains

Abstract Changes in abiotic factors along altitudinal and latitudinal gradients cause powerful environmental gradients. The topography of alpine areas generates environmental gradients over short distances, and alpine areas are expected to experience greater temperature increase compared to the glob...

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Main Authors: Johannes Måsviken, Fredrik Dalerum, Sara A. O. Cousins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-06-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6237
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spelling doaj-21d496d8e07c4fb69005a98864acebb12021-04-02T11:18:38ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-06-0110114838485310.1002/ece3.6237Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountainsJohannes Måsviken0Fredrik Dalerum1Sara A. O. Cousins2Department of Zoology Stockholm University Stockholm SwedenDepartment of Zoology Stockholm University Stockholm SwedenBiogeography & Geomatics Department of Physical Geography Stockholm University Stockholm SwedenAbstract Changes in abiotic factors along altitudinal and latitudinal gradients cause powerful environmental gradients. The topography of alpine areas generates environmental gradients over short distances, and alpine areas are expected to experience greater temperature increase compared to the global average. In this study, we investigate alpha, beta, and gamma diversity, as well as community structure, of vascular plant communities along altitudinal gradients at three latitudes in the Swedish mountains. Species richness and evenness decreased with altitude, but the patterns within the altitudinal gradient varied between sites, including a sudden decrease at high altitude, a monotonic decrease, and a unimodal pattern. However, we did not observe a decline in beta diversity with altitude at all sites, and plant communities at all sites were spatially nested according to some other factors than altitude, such as the availability of water or microtopographic position. Moreover, the observed diversity patterns did not follow the latitudinal gradient. We observed a spatial modularity according to altitude, which was consistent across sites. Our results suggest strong influences of site‐specific factors on plant community composition and that such factors partly may override effects from altitudinal and latitudinal environmental variation. Spatial variation of the observed vascular plant communities appears to have been caused by a combination of processes at multiple spatial scales.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6237altitudinal gradientcommunity structureelevationlatitudemountain ecologytaxonomic diversity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johannes Måsviken
Fredrik Dalerum
Sara A. O. Cousins
spellingShingle Johannes Måsviken
Fredrik Dalerum
Sara A. O. Cousins
Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountains
Ecology and Evolution
altitudinal gradient
community structure
elevation
latitude
mountain ecology
taxonomic diversity
author_facet Johannes Måsviken
Fredrik Dalerum
Sara A. O. Cousins
author_sort Johannes Måsviken
title Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountains
title_short Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountains
title_full Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountains
title_fullStr Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountains
title_full_unstemmed Contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the Swedish mountains
title_sort contrasting altitudinal variation of alpine plant communities along the swedish mountains
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Changes in abiotic factors along altitudinal and latitudinal gradients cause powerful environmental gradients. The topography of alpine areas generates environmental gradients over short distances, and alpine areas are expected to experience greater temperature increase compared to the global average. In this study, we investigate alpha, beta, and gamma diversity, as well as community structure, of vascular plant communities along altitudinal gradients at three latitudes in the Swedish mountains. Species richness and evenness decreased with altitude, but the patterns within the altitudinal gradient varied between sites, including a sudden decrease at high altitude, a monotonic decrease, and a unimodal pattern. However, we did not observe a decline in beta diversity with altitude at all sites, and plant communities at all sites were spatially nested according to some other factors than altitude, such as the availability of water or microtopographic position. Moreover, the observed diversity patterns did not follow the latitudinal gradient. We observed a spatial modularity according to altitude, which was consistent across sites. Our results suggest strong influences of site‐specific factors on plant community composition and that such factors partly may override effects from altitudinal and latitudinal environmental variation. Spatial variation of the observed vascular plant communities appears to have been caused by a combination of processes at multiple spatial scales.
topic altitudinal gradient
community structure
elevation
latitude
mountain ecology
taxonomic diversity
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6237
work_keys_str_mv AT johannesmasviken contrastingaltitudinalvariationofalpineplantcommunitiesalongtheswedishmountains
AT fredrikdalerum contrastingaltitudinalvariationofalpineplantcommunitiesalongtheswedishmountains
AT saraaocousins contrastingaltitudinalvariationofalpineplantcommunitiesalongtheswedishmountains
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