Range dynamics of mountain plants decrease with elevation.
Sabine B. Rumpf,Karl Hülber,Günther Klonner,Dietmar Moser,Martin Schütz,Johannes Wessely,Wolfgang Willner,Niklaus E. Zimmermann,Stefan Dullinger +8 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that, over recent decades, increases in abundance were more pronounced than range shifts, suggesting an in-filling process which decreases in intensity with increasing elevation.
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Abstract: Many studies report that mountain plant species are shifting upward in elevation. However, the majority of these reports focus on shifts of upper limits. Here, we expand the focus and simultaneously analyze changes of both range limits, optima, and abundances of 183 mountain plant species. We therefore resurveyed 1,576 vegetation plots first recorded before 1970 in the European Alps. We found that both range limits and optima shifted upward in elevation, but the most pronounced trend was a mean increase in species abundance. Despite huge species-specific variation, range dynamics showed a consistent trend along the elevational gradient: Both range limits and optima shifted upslope faster the lower they were situated historically, and species' abundance increased more for species from lower elevations. Traits affecting the species' dispersal and persistence capacity were not related to their range dynamics. Using indicator values to stratify species by their thermal and nutrient demands revealed that elevational ranges of thermophilic species tended to expand, while those of cold-adapted species tended to contract. Abundance increases were strongest for nutriphilous species. These results suggest that recent climate warming interacted with airborne nitrogen deposition in driving the observed dynamics. So far, the majority of species appear as "winners" of recent changes, yet "losers" are overrepresented among high-elevation, cold-adapted species with low nutrient demands. In the decades to come, high-alpine species may hence face the double pressure of climatic changes and novel, superior competitors that move up faster than they themselves can escape to even higher elevations.
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Palaeoecological multiproxy reconstruction captures long-term climatic and anthropogenic impacts on vegetation dynamics in the Rhaetian Alps
Laura Dziomber,Erika Gobet,María Leunda,Lisa Gurtner,Hendrik Vogel,Nicolas Tournier,Adrianus Damanik,Sönke Szidat,Willy Tinner,Christoph Schwörer +9 more
TL;DR: A 14,200-year multiproxy study in the Rhaetian Alps reveals climate-driven afforestation, forest expansion, and human-induced changes in vegetation dynamics, with implications for future climate change mitigation and preservation of mountain plant diversity through low-intensity pastoralism.
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Uncertainty and risk of pruned distributional ranges induced by climate shifts for alpine species: a case study for 79 Kobresia species in China
TL;DR: The fuzzy set-based classification method, Monte Carlo scheme, and scenarios data of climate shifts identified the uncertainty of climate-induced range shifts of Kobresia species, and recognized which species would be in high danger of shrinking their ranges to critical sizes.
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Climate Change and New Markets: Multi-Factorial Drivers of Recent Land-Use Change in the Semi-Arid Trans-Himalaya, Nepal
TL;DR: In this article , a detailed on-site re-mapping of the settlements of Marpha and Kagbeni were performed based on historical maps from the early 1990s, and land-use patterns and functionality of buildings in the district capital of Jomsom and in the settlement Ranipauwa/Muktinath were mapped.
Improving hydrologic model realism using stable water isotopes in the swiss alps
Harsh Beria
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: In this article, stable water isotopes are used to improve the representation of hydrological processes occurring within mountainous landscapes in rainfall-runoff models, and a new hydrologic modeling framework is proposed to constrain both the celerity and velocity behavior of catchments.
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Dispersal potential does not predict recent range expansions of sub-Antarctic plant species
Nompilo Mazibuko,Michelle Greve,Peter Christiaan le Roux +2 more
TL;DR: This study quantifies dispersal potential of sub-Antarctic plant species via multiple vectors, but finds no correlation with recent range expansions, suggesting other mechanisms, such as demography and competition, drive species range expansion rates.
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