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Plant community structure and nitrogen inputs modulate the climate signal on leaf traits
Author(s) -
Borgy Benjamin,
Violle Cyrille,
Choler Philippe,
Denelle Pierre,
Munoz François,
Kattge Jens,
Lavorel Sandra,
Loranger Jessy,
Amiaud Bernard,
Bahn Michael,
van Bodegom Peter M.,
Brisse Henry,
Debarros Guilhem,
Diquelou Sylvain,
Gachet Sophie,
Jolivet Claudy,
LemauvielLavenant Servane,
Mikolajczak Alexis,
Olivier Jean,
Ordoñez Jenny,
de Ruffray Patrice,
Viovy Nicolas,
Garnier Eric
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
global ecology and biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.164
H-Index - 152
eISSN - 1466-8238
pISSN - 1466-822X
DOI - 10.1111/geb.12623
Subject(s) - specific leaf area , growing season , trait , agronomy , plant community , ecosystem , ecology , biogeochemical cycle , environmental science , biology , plant functional type , vegetation (pathology) , terrestrial ecosystem , environmental gradient , abundance (ecology) , botany , photosynthesis , habitat , ecological succession , medicine , pathology , computer science , programming language
Aim Leaf traits strongly impact biogeochemical cycles in terrestrial ecosystems. Understanding leaf trait variation along environmental gradients is thus essential to improve the representation of vegetation in Earth system models. Our aims were to quantify relationships between leaf traits and climate in permanent grasslands at a biogeographical scale and to test whether these relationships were sensitive to (a) the level of nitrogen inputs and (b) the inclusion of information pertaining to plant community organization. Location Permanent grasslands throughout France. Methods We combined existing datasets on climate, soil, nitrogen inputs (fertilization and deposition), species composition and four traits, namely specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content and leaf nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations, for 15,865 French permanent grasslands. Trait–climate relationships were tested using the following four climatic variables available across 1,833 pixels (5 km × 5 km): mean annual temperature (MAT) and precipitation (MAP), and two indices accounting for the length of the growing season. We compared these relationships at the pixel level using either using community‐level or species’ trait means. Results Our findings were as follows: (a) leaf traits related to plant nutrient economy shift consistently along a gradient of growing season length accounting for temperature and soil water limitations of plant growth (GSL tw ); (b) weighting leaf traits by species abundance in local communities is pivotal to capture leaf trait–environment relationships correctly at a biogeographical scale; and (c) the relationships between traits and GSL tw weaken for grasslands with a high nitrogen input. Main conclusions The effects of climate on plant communities are better described using composite descriptors than coarse variables such as MAT or MAP, but appear weaker for high‐nitrogen grasslands. Using information at the community level tends to strengthen trait–climate relationships. The interplay of land management, community assembly and bioclimate appears crucial to the prediction of leaf trait variations and their effects on biogeochemical cycles.