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Growth and community responses of alpine dwarf shrubs to in situ CO 2 enrichment and soil warming
Author(s) -
Dawes Melissa A.,
Hagedorn Frank,
Zumbrunn Thomas,
Handa Ira Tanya,
Hättenschwiler Stephan,
Wipf Sonja,
Rixen Christian
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2011.03722.x
Subject(s) - vaccinium myrtillus , vaccinium , shrub , plant community , dominance (genetics) , ecosystem , understory , biology , ecology , botany , environmental science , species richness , canopy , biochemistry , gene
Summary• Rising CO 2 concentrations and the associated global warming are expected to have large impacts on high‐elevation ecosystems, yet long‐term multifactor experiments in these environments are rare. • We investigated how growth of dominant dwarf shrub species ( Vaccinium myrtillus , Vaccinium gaultherioides and Empetrum hermaphroditum ) and community composition in the understorey of larch and pine trees responded to 9 yr of CO 2 enrichment and 3 yr of soil warming at the treeline in the Swiss Alps. • Vaccinium myrtillus was the only species that showed a clear positive effect of CO 2 on growth, with no decline over time in the annual shoot growth response. Soil warming stimulated V. myrtillus growth even more than elevated CO 2 and was accompanied by increased plant‐available soil nitrogen (N) and leaf N concentrations. Growth of Vaccinium gaultherioides and E. hermaphroditum was not influenced by warming. Vascular plant species richness declined in elevated CO 2 plots with larch, while the number of moss and lichen species decreased under warming. • Ongoing environmental change could lead to less diverse plant communities and increased dominance of the particularly responsive V. myrtillus in the studied alpine treeline. These changes are the consequence of independent CO 2 and soil warming effects, a result that should facilitate predictive modelling approaches.

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