Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Jul;24(7):2952-2964. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14121. Epub 2018 Apr 10.
Species are often controlled by biotic factors such as competition at the warm edge of their distribution range. Disturbances at the treeline, disrupting competitive dominance, may thus enable alpine species to utilize lower altitudes. We searched for evidence for range expansion in grazed, fire-managed Ethiopian subalpine Erica heathlands across a 25-year chronosequence. We examined vascular plant composition in 48 plots (5 × 5 m) across an altitudinal range of 3,465-3,711 m.a.s.l. and analyzed how community composition changed in relation to increasing competition over time (using a Shade index based on Erica shrub height and cover) and altitude. Species' habitats and altitudinal ranges were derived from literature. Time since fire explained more variation (r = .41) in species composition than altitude did (r = .32) in an NMDS analysis. Community-weighted altitudinal optima for species in a plot decreased strongly with increasing shade (GLM, Standardized Regression Coefficient SRC = -.41, p = .003), but increased only weakly with altitude (SRC = .26, p = .054). In other words, young stands were dominated by species with higher altitudinal optima than old stands. Forest species richness increased with Log Shade index (SRC = .12, p = .008), but was unaffected by altitude (SRC = -.07, p = .13). However, richness of alpine and heathland species was not highest in plots with lowest Shade index, but displayed a unimodal pattern with an initial increase, followed by a decrease when shading increased (altitude was not significant). Our results indicate that disturbance from the traditional patch burning increases the available habitat for less competitive high-altitude plants and prevents tree line ascent. Therefore, maintaining, but regulating, the traditional land use increases the Afro-alpine flora's resilience to global warming. However, this system is threatened by a new REDD+ program attempting to increase carbon storage via fire suppression. This study highlights the importance of understanding traditional management regimes for biodiversity conservation in cultural landscapes in an era of global change.
物种通常受到生物因素的控制,例如在分布范围的温暖边缘的竞争。林线干扰,打破竞争优势,因此可能使高山物种利用较低的海拔。我们在埃塞俄比亚亚高山石南荒地的放牧、火灾管理的 25 年时间序列中寻找了证据表明范围扩大。我们在 3465-3711 m.a.s.l 的海拔范围内,检查了 48 个 5 x 5 m 的样地中维管束植物的组成,并分析了社区组成如何随时间的推移而变化(使用基于石南灌木高度和覆盖的阴影指数)和海拔。物种的栖息地和海拔范围是从文献中得出的。火灾发生后的时间解释了物种组成的更多变化(NMDS 分析,r =.41),而海拔解释的变化较少(r =.32)。一个样地中物种的群落加权海拔最优值随阴影增加而强烈下降(GLM,标准化回归系数 SRC = -.41,p =.003),但仅随海拔微弱增加(SRC =.26,p =.054)。换句话说,年轻的林分主要由比老林分具有更高海拔最优值的物种组成。森林物种丰富度随对数阴影指数增加(SRC =.12,p =.008),但不受海拔影响(SRC =.07,p =.13)。然而,高山和石南荒地物种的丰富度并非在阴影指数最低的样地中最高,而是呈单峰模式,最初增加,然后随着阴影增加而减少(海拔无显著影响)。我们的结果表明,传统斑块燃烧的干扰增加了对竞争力较低的高海拔植物的可用栖息地,并阻止了林线上升。因此,维护但调节传统土地利用增加了非洲高山植物对全球变暖的恢复力。然而,这一系统受到新的 REDD+计划的威胁,该计划试图通过抑制火灾来增加碳储存。这项研究强调了在全球变化时代理解文化景观中传统管理机制对生物多样性保护的重要性。