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Population and community‐level compositional patterns shape the realized niche of the rare arctic‐alpine species Carex lachenalii Schkuhr
Author(s) -
Czortek Patryk,
Delimat Anna,
Dyderski Marcin K.,
Zięba Antoni,
Jagodziński Andrzej M.,
Jaroszewicz Bogdan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nordic journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.333
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1756-1051
pISSN - 0107-055X
DOI - 10.1111/njb.02522
Subject(s) - biology , ecology , population , stolon , competition (biology) , carex , adaptation (eye) , vegetation (pathology) , habitat , niche , cyperaceae , botany , poaceae , medicine , demography , pathology , neuroscience , sociology
The ability for vegetative growth and development of generative organs often reflects an adaptation to the environment and may be a suitable proxy for understanding population dynamics of rare relict species. An example of such a plant is Carex lachenalii Schkuhr, an arctic‐alpine species, in the temperate zone of Europe only occurring in isolated localities of high‐elevation mountain ranges. We aimed to assess whether there were relationships between flower production and clonal growth of C. lachenalii , both at the tuft and plot level, and how co‐occurring vegetation could modify this relationship. In the study we focused on population‐level traits of C. lachenalii , vegetation traits and components of functional diversity. At the tuft level we found that the proportion of flowering ramets of C. lachenalii decreased with increasing diameter of the tuft. At the plot level, in snowbed vegetation C. lachenalii produced more flowering ramets. We suggest this is due to higher environmental stress, expressed by high importance of habitat filtering (low functional dispersion) in shaping species composition of co‐occurring vegetation. In granite grasslands and milder environment (expressed by higher functional dispersion), C. lachenalii produced more vegetative ramets, which we suggest is a result of a more competitive environment. While in snowbeds investment in flowering ramets could promote successful persistence of C. lachenalii , survival of subpopulations occurring in the highly competitive conditions of granite grasslands may be uncertain due to potentially weak adaptation to competition with graminoids and dwarf shrubs.