Cui Haijun, Töpper Joachim P, Yang Yan, Vandvik Vigdis, Wang Genxu
National Plateau Wetlands Research Center, College of Wetlands, Southwest Forestry University, Kunming, China.
Key Laboratory of Mountain Surface Processes and Ecological Regulation, Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu, China.
Front Plant Sci. 2018 Jul 30;9:1069. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2018.01069. eCollection 2018.
Climate warming poses considerable challenges for alpine plant species, especially for competitively inferior ones with resource-conservative adaptations to cold climates. The Himalayas are warming at rates considerably faster than the global average, so it is particularly important to assess how and through which mechanisms alpine plant species are affected there. We employed a demographic approach in a climate change experiment, where vegetation turfs were transplanted reciprocally between the central parts of the study species' ( L. var. ) range and the warmer range margin, with a temperature difference of ca. 1°C. In addition, turfs were also transplanted outside the range to warmer habitats, simulating two different scenarios of climate warming, +1 and +4°C. Transplanting to warmer sites negatively impacted population growth rates (λ), survival and clonality, but did not affect growth and fecundity, while the productivity of the plant community increased. The reciprocal transplants to the colder habitat showed the opposite effects, for both and the plant community, indicating plastic responses of the study species, driven by changes in plant-plant competition. However, the leaf traits underlying the modeled population growth rates were origin-site specific and not affected by the climate-change treatments over the study period, suggesting local adaptation of growth form to competition in the warmer range margin, and to climate adversity in the colder range center. The transplants outside the present species' range showed consistently stronger reductions in population growth rate and survival, with mortality of 90-100% in the +4°C treatment. This illustrates that climatic changes beyond species' present climatic ranges pose a serious risk for range contraction and extinction for Himalayan alpine species in the near future. As seems mostly limited by competition under warming, its persistence in a future climate may become increasingly dependent on keeping competitive effects from the surrounding community low, for instance by management interventions like grazing and mowing.
气候变暖给高山植物物种带来了巨大挑战,尤其是对于那些在寒冷气候下具有资源保守型适应策略的竞争力较弱的物种。喜马拉雅地区的变暖速度比全球平均速度快得多,因此评估高山植物物种在该地区受到何种影响以及通过何种机制受到影响尤为重要。我们在一项气候变化实验中采用了种群统计学方法,将植被草皮在研究物种(L. var.)分布范围的中部和较温暖的范围边缘之间相互移植,温度差约为1°C。此外,草皮还被移植到分布范围之外的温暖栖息地,模拟了两种不同的气候变暖情景,即+1°C和+4°C。移植到温暖的地点对种群增长率(λ)、存活率和克隆性产生了负面影响,但对生长和繁殖力没有影响,而植物群落的生产力有所提高。向较寒冷栖息地的相互移植对种群和植物群落都产生了相反的影响,这表明研究物种具有可塑性反应,这种反应是由植物间竞争的变化驱动的。然而,模拟种群增长率的叶片性状是特定于原生地的,在研究期间不受气候变化处理的影响,这表明生长形式在较温暖的范围边缘对竞争具有局部适应性,而在较寒冷的范围中心对气候逆境具有局部适应性。在当前物种分布范围之外的移植显示,种群增长率和存活率持续下降幅度更大,在+4°C处理下死亡率达到90 - 100%。这表明,超出物种当前气候范围的气候变化在不久的将来会给喜马拉雅高山物种的范围收缩和灭绝带来严重风险。由于在变暖条件下种群增长似乎主要受竞争限制,其在未来气候中的持续存在可能越来越依赖于降低周围群落的竞争影响,例如通过放牧和割草等管理干预措施。