Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53704.
Department of Plant Biology and Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Feb 14;120(7):e2201943119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2201943119. Epub 2023 Feb 6.
Ecological restoration is essential for maintaining biodiversity in the face of dynamic, global changes in climate, human land use, and disturbance regimes. Effective restoration requires understanding bottlenecks in plant community recovery that exist today, while recognizing that these bottlenecks may relate to complex histories of environmental change. Such understanding has been a challenge because few long-term, well-replicated experiments exist to decipher the demographic processes influencing recovery for numerous species against the backdrop of multiyear variation in climate and management. We address this challenge through a long-term and geographically expansive experiment in longleaf pine savannas, an imperiled ecosystem and biodiversity hotspot in the southeastern United States. Using 48 sites at three locations spanning 480 km, the 8-y experiment manipulated initial seed arrival for 24 herbaceous plant species and presence of competitors to evaluate the impacts of climate variability and management actions (e.g., prescribed burning) on plant establishment and persistence. Adding seeds increased plant establishment of many species. Cool and wet climatic conditions, low tree density, and reduced litter depth also promoted establishment. Once established, most species persisted for the duration of the 8-y experiment. Plant traits were most predictive when tightly coupled to the process of establishment. Our results illustrate how seed additions can restore plant diversity and how interannual climatic variation affects the dynamics of plant communities across a large region. The significant effects of temperature and precipitation inform how future climate may affect restoration and conservation via large-scale changes in the fundamental processes of establishment and persistence.
生态恢复对于应对气候变化、人类土地利用和干扰格局的动态全球变化,维护生物多样性至关重要。有效的恢复需要了解当前植物群落恢复的瓶颈,同时认识到这些瓶颈可能与环境变化的复杂历史有关。由于很少有长期、复制良好的实验来破译影响众多物种恢复的人口过程,这些物种在气候和管理的多年变化背景下,因此理解这些瓶颈一直是一个挑战。我们通过在美国东南部一个处于危险之中的生态系统和生物多样性热点——长叶松稀树草原的长期和广泛的实验来应对这一挑战。该实验在三个地点的 48 个地点进行,跨度为 480 公里,该 8 年实验操纵了 24 种草本植物的初始种子到达和竞争者的存在,以评估气候变异性和管理措施(如规定燃烧)对植物建立和持久性的影响。添加种子增加了许多物种的植物建立。凉爽和潮湿的气候条件、低树木密度和减少的凋落物深度也促进了建立。一旦建立,大多数物种在 8 年实验的持续时间内都能存活下来。当植物特性与建立过程紧密结合时,它们最具预测性。我们的研究结果说明了种子添加如何恢复植物多样性,以及年际气候变化如何影响整个大区域植物群落的动态。温度和降水的显著影响说明了未来气候如何通过建立和持久性等基本过程的大规模变化来影响恢复和保护。