Cowles Jane, Boldgiv Bazartseren, Liancourt Pierre, Petraitis Peter S, Casper Brenda B
Department of Biology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA USA.
Department of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior University of Minnesota Twin Cities Saint Paul MN USA.
Ecol Evol. 2018 May 8;8(11):5267-5278. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3995. eCollection 2018 Jun.
Global climate change is affecting and will continue to affect ecosystems worldwide. Specifically, temperature and precipitation are both expected to shift globally, and their separate and interactive effects will likely affect ecosystems differentially depending on current temperature, precipitation regimes, and other biotic and environmental factors. It is not currently understood how the effects of increasing temperature on plant communities may depend on either precipitation or where communities lie on soil moisture gradients. Such knowledge would play a crucial role in increasing our predictive ability for future effects of climate change in different systems. To this end, we conducted a multi-factor global change experiment at two locations, differing in temperature, moisture, aspect, and plant community composition, on the same slope in the northern Mongolian steppe. The natural differences in temperature and moisture between locations served as a point of comparison for the experimental manipulations of temperature and precipitation. We conducted two separate experiments, one examining the effect of climate manipulation via open-top chambers (OTCs) across the two different slope locations, the other a factorial OTC by watering experiment at one of the two locations. By combining these experiments, we were able to assess how OTCs impact plant productivity and diversity across a natural and manipulated range of soil moisture. We found that warming effects were context dependent, with the greatest negative impacts of warming on diversity in the warmer, drier upper slope location and in the unwatered plots. Our study is an important step in understanding how global change will affect ecosystems across multiple scales and locations.
全球气候变化正在影响并将继续影响全球的生态系统。具体而言,预计全球范围内温度和降水都将发生变化,其单独和交互的影响可能会因当前温度、降水模式以及其他生物和环境因素而对生态系统产生不同的影响。目前尚不清楚温度升高对植物群落的影响如何取决于降水或群落所处的土壤湿度梯度位置。此类知识对于提高我们预测气候变化在不同系统中未来影响的能力将起到关键作用。为此,我们在蒙古北部草原同一斜坡上的两个地点进行了一项多因素全球变化实验,这两个地点在温度、湿度、坡向和植物群落组成方面存在差异。地点之间温度和湿度的自然差异作为温度和降水实验操纵的比较点。我们进行了两项独立实验,一项是通过开顶式气室(OTC)在两个不同斜坡地点进行气候操纵的实验,另一项是在两个地点之一进行的OTC浇水析因实验。通过结合这些实验,我们能够评估OTC如何在自然和人为控制的土壤湿度范围内影响植物生产力和多样性。我们发现变暖效应取决于环境,变暖对较温暖、较干燥的上坡地点和未浇水地块的多样性产生的负面影响最大。我们的研究是理解全球变化将如何在多个尺度和地点影响生态系统的重要一步。