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Do tradeoffs govern plant species responses to different global change treatments?

Authors :
Langley, J.A.
Grman, E.
Wilcox, K.R.
Avolio, M.L.
Komatsu, K.J.
Collins, S.L.
Koerner, S.E.
Smith, M.D.
Baldwin, A.H.
Bowman, W.
Chiariello, N.
Eskelinen, Anu Maria
Harmens, H.
Hovenden, M.
Klanderud, K.
McCulley, R.L.
Onipchenko, V.G.
Robinson, C.H.
Suding, K.N.
Langley, J.A.
Grman, E.
Wilcox, K.R.
Avolio, M.L.
Komatsu, K.J.
Collins, S.L.
Koerner, S.E.
Smith, M.D.
Baldwin, A.H.
Bowman, W.
Chiariello, N.
Eskelinen, Anu Maria
Harmens, H.
Hovenden, M.
Klanderud, K.
McCulley, R.L.
Onipchenko, V.G.
Robinson, C.H.
Suding, K.N.
Source :
ISSN: 0012-9658
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Plants are subject to tradeoffs among growth strategies such that adaptations for optimal growth in one condition can preclude optimal growth in another. Thus, we predicted that a plant species that responds positively to one global change treatment would be less likely than average to respond positively to another treatment, particularly for pairs of treatments that favor distinct traits. We examined plant species abundances in 39 global change experiments manipulating two or more of the following: CO2, nitrogen, phosphorus, water, temperature, or disturbance. Overall, the directional response of a species to one treatment was 13% more likely than expected to oppose its response to a another single-factor treatment. This tendency was detectable across the global dataset but held little predictive power for individual treatment combinations or within individual experiments. While tradeoffs in the ability to respond to different global change treatments exert discernible global effects, other forces obscure their influence in local communities.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 0012-9658
Notes :
ISSN: 0012-9658, Ecology 103 (6);; e3626, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1406014605
Document Type :
Electronic Resource