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Temporal variability in production is not consistently affected by global change drivers across herbaceous-dominated ecosystems
Author(s) -
Meghan L. Avolio,
Kevin R. Wilcox,
Kimberly J. Komatsu,
Nathan P. Lemoine,
William D. Bowman,
Scott L. Collins,
Alan K. Knapp,
Sally E. Koerner,
Melinda D. Smith,
Sara G. Baer,
Katherine L. Gross,
Forest Isbell,
Jennie R. McLaren,
Peter B. Reich,
Katharine N. Suding,
K. Blake Suttle,
David Tilman,
Zhuwen Xu,
Qiang Yu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
oecologia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.328
H-Index - 195
eISSN - 1432-1939
pISSN - 0029-8549
DOI - 10.1007/s00442-020-04787-6
Subject(s) - primary production , ecosystem , species evenness , abiotic component , ecology , biology , herbaceous plant , climate change , precipitation , environmental science , species diversity , geography , meteorology
Understanding how global change drivers (GCDs) affect aboveground net primary production (ANPP) through time is essential to predicting the reliability and maintenance of ecosystem function and services in the future. While GCDs, such as drought, warming and elevated nutrients, are known to affect mean ANPP, less is known about how they affect inter-annual variability in ANPP. We examined 27 global change experiments located in 11 different herbaceous ecosystems that varied in both abiotic and biotic conditions, to investigate changes in the mean and temporal variability of ANPP (measured as the coefficient of variation) in response to different GCD manipulations, including resource additions, warming, and irrigation. From this comprehensive data synthesis, we found that GCD treatments increased mean ANPP. However, GCD manipulations both increased and decreased temporal variability of ANPP (24% of comparisons), with no net effect overall. These inconsistent effects on temporal variation in ANPP can, in part, be attributed to site characteristics, such as mean annual precipitation and temperature as well as plant community evenness. For example, decreases in temporal variability in ANPP with the GCD treatments occurred in wetter and warmer sites with lower plant community evenness. Further, the addition of several nutrients simultaneously increased the sensitivity of ANPP to interannual variation in precipitation. Based on this analysis, we expect that GCDs will likely affect the magnitude more than the reliability over time of ecosystem production in the future.

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