Department of Geography and School of Environmental Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Ambio. 2011 Sep;40(6):660-71. doi: 10.1007/s13280-011-0172-2.
Repeat measurements from long-term plots provide precise data for studying plant community change. In 2010, we visited a remote location in Yukon, Canada, where a detailed survey of alpine tundra communities was conducted in 1968. Plant community composition was resurveyed on the same four slopes using the same methods as the original study. Species richness and diversity increased significantly over the 42 years and non-metric multidimensional scaling indicated that community composition had also changed significantly. However, the direction and magnitude of change varied with aspect. Dominant species were not replaced or eliminated but, instead, declined in relative importance. Fine-scale changes in vegetation were evident from repeat photography and dendro-ecological analysis of erect shrubs, supporting the community-level analysis. The period of study corresponds to a mean annual temperature increase of 2 degrees C, suggesting that climate warming has influenced these changes.
重复测量来自长期的研究结果为研究植物群落变化提供了精确的数据。2010 年,我们访问了加拿大育空地区的一个偏远地点,在那里,1968 年对高山冻原群落进行了详细的调查。我们使用与原始研究相同的方法对同一四个斜坡上的植物群落组成进行了重新调查。42 年来,物种丰富度和多样性显著增加,非度量多维标度分析表明群落组成也发生了显著变化。然而,变化的方向和幅度随方位而变化。优势种并没有被取代或消灭,而是相对重要性下降。重复摄影和直立灌木的树木年轮生态分析显示植被的细微变化,支持了群落水平的分析。研究期间的平均年气温上升了 2 摄氏度,表明气候变暖影响了这些变化。