Sierra Nevada Research Institute, University of California, Merced, 5200 North Lake Road, Merced, California, 95343, USA.
Great Basin Institute, 16750 Mt. Rose Hwy. Reno, Nevada, 89511, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2017 Sep;27(6):1876-1887. doi: 10.1002/eap.1574. Epub 2017 Jul 12.
Mountain meadows have high biodiversity and help regulate stream water release following the snowmelt pulse. However, many meadows are experiencing woody plant encroachment, threatening these ecosystem services. While there have been field surveys of individual meadows and remote sensing-based landscape-scale studies of encroachment, what is missing is a broad-scale, ground-based study to understand common regional drivers, especially at high elevations, where land management has often played a less direct role. With this study, we ask: What are the climate and landscape conditions conducive to woody plant encroachment at the landscape scale, and how has historical climate variation affected tree recruitment in subalpine meadows over time? We measured density of encroaching trees across 340 subalpine meadows in the central Sierra Nevada, California, USA, and used generalized additive models (GAMs) to determine the relationship between landscape-scale patterns of encroachment and meadow environmental properties. We determined ages of trees in 30 survey meadows, used observed climate and GAMs to model the relationship between timing of recruitment and climate since the early 1900s, and extrapolated recruitment patterns into the future using downscaled climate scenarios. Encroachment was high among meadows with lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta Douglas ex Loudon var. murrayana (Balf.) Engelm.) in the immediate vicinity, at lower elevations, with physical conditions favoring strong soil drying, and with maximum temperatures above or below average. Climatic conditions during the year of germination were unimportant, with tree recruitment instead depending on a 3-yr seed production period prior to germination and a 6-yr seedling establishment period following germination. Recruitment was high when the seed production period had high snowpack, and when the seedling establishment period had warm summer maximum temperatures, high summer precipitation, and high snowpack. Applying our temporal model to downscaled output from four global climate models indicated that the average meadow will shift to forest by the end of the 21st century. Sierra Nevada meadow encroachment by conifers is ubiquitous and associated with climate conditions increasingly favorable for tree recruitment, which will lead to substantial changes in subalpine meadows and the ecosystem services they provide.
高山草甸具有丰富的生物多样性,有助于调节融雪脉冲后的溪流放水。然而,许多草甸正经历着木本植物的侵入,威胁着这些生态系统服务。虽然已经对个别草甸进行了实地调查,以及基于遥感的景观尺度的侵入研究,但缺乏广泛的、基于地面的研究来了解共同的区域驱动因素,特别是在高海拔地区,那里的土地管理通常没有发挥那么直接的作用。通过这项研究,我们提出了以下问题:在景观尺度上,有利于木本植物侵入的气候和景观条件是什么,历史气候变化是如何随着时间的推移影响亚高山草甸中树木的繁殖的?我们在美国加利福尼亚州内华达山脉中部的 340 个亚高山草甸中测量了侵入树木的密度,并使用广义加性模型(GAMs)来确定侵入景观模式与草甸环境特性之间的关系。我们确定了 30 个调查草甸中树木的年龄,使用观测到的气候和 GAMs 来模拟自 20 世纪初以来招募时间与气候之间的关系,并通过降尺度气候情景将招募模式外推到未来。在紧邻的白云杉(Pinus contorta Douglas ex Loudon var. murrayana (Balf.) Engelm.)附近、海拔较低、有利于强烈土壤干燥的条件下以及最高温度高于或低于平均值的草甸中,侵入现象较为严重。在发芽年份的气候条件并不重要,树木的繁殖取决于发芽前 3 年的种子生产期和发芽后 6 年的幼苗建立期。在种子生产期有高积雪量,而幼苗建立期有温暖的夏季最高温度、高夏季降水和高积雪量时,繁殖量较高。将我们的时间模型应用于四个全球气候模型的降尺度输出结果表明,到 21 世纪末,平均草甸将转变为森林。内华达山脉高山草甸的针叶树侵入是普遍存在的,与有利于树木繁殖的气候条件有关,这将导致亚高山草甸及其提供的生态系统服务发生重大变化。