Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional Type

Climate warming exerts profound effects on plant community composition. However, responses to climate warming are often reported at the community and functional type levels, but not at the species level. To test whether warming-induced changes are consistent among community, functional type, and spe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xiaoli Hu, Wenlong Zhou, Xiaonuo Li, Karl J. Niklas, Shucun Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2021.569422/full
id doaj-53f3ffb2f8b64bccb3a4d85123ce2620
record_format Article
spelling doaj-53f3ffb2f8b64bccb3a4d85123ce26202021-01-28T06:42:18ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2021-01-01910.3389/fevo.2021.569422569422Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional TypeXiaoli Hu0Wenlong Zhou1Xiaonuo Li2Karl J. Niklas3Shucun Sun4Department of Ecology, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing, ChinaDepartment of Ecology, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing, ChinaDepartment of Ecology, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing, ChinaPlant Biology Section, School of Integrative Plant Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United StatesDepartment of Ecology, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing, ChinaClimate warming exerts profound effects on plant community composition. However, responses to climate warming are often reported at the community and functional type levels, but not at the species level. To test whether warming-induced changes are consistent among community, functional type, and species levels, we examined the warming-induced changes at different levels in an alpine meadow from 2015 to 2018. The warming was achieved by deploying six (open top) chambers [including three non-warmed chambers and three warmed chambers; 15 × 15 × 2.5 m (height) for each] that resulted in a small increase in mean annual temperature (0.3–0.5°C, varying with years) with a higher increase during the non-growing season (0.4–0.6°C) than in the growing season (0.03–0.47°C). The results show that warming increased plant aboveground biomass but did not change species richness, or Shannon diversity and evenness at the community level. At the functional type level, warming increased the relative abundance of grasses from 3 to 16%, but decreased the relative abundance of forbs from 89 to 79%; relative abundances of sedges and legumes were unchanged. However, for a given functional type, warming could result in contrasting effects on the relative abundance among species, e.g., the abundances of the forb species Geranium pylzowianum, Potentilla anserine, Euphrasia pectinate, and the sedge species Carex atrofusca increased in the warmed (compared to the non-warmed) chambers. More importantly, the difference in species identity between warmed and non-warmed chambers revealed warming-induced species loss. Specifically, four forb species were lost in both types of chambers, one additional forb species (Angelica apaensis) was lost in the non-warmed chambers, and two additional species (one forb species Saussurea stella and one sedge species Blysmus sinocompressus) were lost in the warmed chambers. Consequently, changes at the species level could not be deduced from the results at the community or functional type levels. These data indicate that species-level responses to climate changes must be more intensively studied. This work also highlights the importance of examining species identity (and not only species number) to study changes of community composition in response to climate warming.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2021.569422/fullcommunity compositionspecies diversityfunctional groupspecies identityalpine meadow
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xiaoli Hu
Wenlong Zhou
Xiaonuo Li
Karl J. Niklas
Shucun Sun
spellingShingle Xiaoli Hu
Wenlong Zhou
Xiaonuo Li
Karl J. Niklas
Shucun Sun
Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional Type
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
community composition
species diversity
functional group
species identity
alpine meadow
author_facet Xiaoli Hu
Wenlong Zhou
Xiaonuo Li
Karl J. Niklas
Shucun Sun
author_sort Xiaoli Hu
title Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional Type
title_short Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional Type
title_full Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional Type
title_fullStr Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional Type
title_full_unstemmed Changes in Community Composition Induced by Experimental Warming in an Alpine Meadow: Beyond Plant Functional Type
title_sort changes in community composition induced by experimental warming in an alpine meadow: beyond plant functional type
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
issn 2296-701X
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Climate warming exerts profound effects on plant community composition. However, responses to climate warming are often reported at the community and functional type levels, but not at the species level. To test whether warming-induced changes are consistent among community, functional type, and species levels, we examined the warming-induced changes at different levels in an alpine meadow from 2015 to 2018. The warming was achieved by deploying six (open top) chambers [including three non-warmed chambers and three warmed chambers; 15 × 15 × 2.5 m (height) for each] that resulted in a small increase in mean annual temperature (0.3–0.5°C, varying with years) with a higher increase during the non-growing season (0.4–0.6°C) than in the growing season (0.03–0.47°C). The results show that warming increased plant aboveground biomass but did not change species richness, or Shannon diversity and evenness at the community level. At the functional type level, warming increased the relative abundance of grasses from 3 to 16%, but decreased the relative abundance of forbs from 89 to 79%; relative abundances of sedges and legumes were unchanged. However, for a given functional type, warming could result in contrasting effects on the relative abundance among species, e.g., the abundances of the forb species Geranium pylzowianum, Potentilla anserine, Euphrasia pectinate, and the sedge species Carex atrofusca increased in the warmed (compared to the non-warmed) chambers. More importantly, the difference in species identity between warmed and non-warmed chambers revealed warming-induced species loss. Specifically, four forb species were lost in both types of chambers, one additional forb species (Angelica apaensis) was lost in the non-warmed chambers, and two additional species (one forb species Saussurea stella and one sedge species Blysmus sinocompressus) were lost in the warmed chambers. Consequently, changes at the species level could not be deduced from the results at the community or functional type levels. These data indicate that species-level responses to climate changes must be more intensively studied. This work also highlights the importance of examining species identity (and not only species number) to study changes of community composition in response to climate warming.
topic community composition
species diversity
functional group
species identity
alpine meadow
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2021.569422/full
work_keys_str_mv AT xiaolihu changesincommunitycompositioninducedbyexperimentalwarminginanalpinemeadowbeyondplantfunctionaltype
AT wenlongzhou changesincommunitycompositioninducedbyexperimentalwarminginanalpinemeadowbeyondplantfunctionaltype
AT xiaonuoli changesincommunitycompositioninducedbyexperimentalwarminginanalpinemeadowbeyondplantfunctionaltype
AT karljniklas changesincommunitycompositioninducedbyexperimentalwarminginanalpinemeadowbeyondplantfunctionaltype
AT shucunsun changesincommunitycompositioninducedbyexperimentalwarminginanalpinemeadowbeyondplantfunctionaltype
_version_ 1724319967894044672