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.
read more
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.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Thermophilisation of communities differs between land plant lineages, land use types and elevation
TL;DR: Thermophilisation of both, bryophyte and vascular plant communities was not driven by a loss of cryophilic species but by an increase in thermophilic and mesophilic species, indicating an in-filling process, and data show that thermophilisation is higher in managed grasslands than in forests.
Elevational range limits in naturalized Rumex conglomeratus likely formed by climate and lack of local adaptation
Jennifer L. Bufford,Philip E. Hulme +1 more
TL;DR: Range limits in Rumex conglomeratus are likely formed by climate and lack of local adaptation.
Distributional response of the rare and critically endangered Ilex nanchuanensis to climate change in East Asia
Zhiming Chen,Wenjuan Kang,G. Li,Renyuan He,Zhuzhu Luo +4 more
TL;DR: This study uses MaxEnt modeling to predict the potential habitat of the critically endangered Ilex nanchuanensis in East Asia under climate change scenarios, highlighting the species' vulnerability to population shrinkage and extinction by the 2070s.
Colonization and extinction lags drive non‐linear responses to warming in mountain plant communities across the Northern Hemisphere
Billur Bektaş,Chelsea Chisholm,Dagmar Egelkraut,Joshua S. Lynn,Sebastian Block,Thomas Deola,Fanny Dommanget,Brian J. Enquist,Deborah E. Goldberg,Sylvia Haider,Aud H. Halbritter,Yongtao He,Renaud Jaunatre,Anke Jentsch,Kari Klanderud,Paul Kardol,Susanne Lachmuth,Grégory Loucougaray,Tamara Münkemüller,Georg Niedrist,Hanna A. Nomoto,Lorah Seltzer,Joachim Paul Töpper,Lisa J. Rew,Tim Seipel,Manzoor A Shah,Richard James Telford,Tom W. N. Walker,Shiping Wang,David A. Wardle,Peter Wolff,Yan Yang,Vigdis Vandvik,Jake M. Alexander +33 more
TL;DR: Warming drives non-linear responses in mountain plant communities across the Northern Hemisphere, with high-elevation communities converging towards lower-elevation communities through colonization and extinction lags, influenced by warming magnitude, duration, and plot size.
Spatiotemporal Patterns of Ant Metacommunity in a Montane Forest Archipelago
Humberto Soares Caldeira Brant,Pedro Giovâni da Silva,Flávio Siqueira de Castro,Lucas Neves Perillo,Frederico de Siqueira Neves +4 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated an ant metacommunity's spatio-temporal patterns in montane forest islands amid a grassland-dominated matrix, and found that ant β-diversity was higher in space than in time, and that species composition variation in time differed between ant species groups.
References
•Journal Article
R: A language and environment for statistical computing.
TL;DR: Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing; permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and permission notice are preserved on all copies.
410.8K
A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change impacts across natural systems
Camille Parmesan,Gary W. Yohe +1 more
TL;DR: A diagnostic fingerprint of temporal and spatial ‘sign-switching’ responses uniquely predicted by twentieth century climate trends is defined and generates ‘very high confidence’ (as laid down by the IPCC) that climate change is already affecting living systems.
Rapid Range Shifts of Species Associated with High Levels of Climate Warming
TL;DR: A meta-analysis shows that species are shifting their distributions in response to climate change at an accelerating rate, and that the range shift of each species depends on multiple internal species traits and external drivers of change.
•Book
Alpine plant life
Christian Körner
- 01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: In this article, a taxonomic index (genera) of alpine plants is presented, with a brief review of water relations and water relations of alpin plants in the alpine life zone.
3K
The use of ‘altitude’ in ecological research
TL;DR: There are two categories of environmental changes with altitude: those physically tied to meters above sea level, such as atmospheric pressure, temperature and clear-sky turbidity; and those that are not generally altitude specific, suchAs moisture, hours of sunshine, wind, season length, geology and even human land use.
2.6K
Related Papers (5)
Michael Gottfried,Harald Pauli,Andreas Futschik,Maia Akhalkatsi,Peter Barančok,José Luis Benito Alonso,Gheorghe Coldea,Jan Dick,Brigitta Erschbamer,Marı´a Rosa Fernández Calzado,George Kazakis,Ján Krajči,Per Larsson,Martin Mallaun,Ottar Michelsen,Dmitry Moiseev,Pavel Moiseev,Ulf Molau,Abderrahmane Merzouki,Laszlo Nagy,George Nakhutsrishvili,Bård Pedersen,G. Pelino,Mihai Puşcaş,Graziano Rossi,Angela Stanisci,Jean-Paul Theurillat,Marcello Tomaselli,Luis Villar,Pascal Vittoz,Ioannis N. Vogiatzakis,Georg Grabherr +31 more
Harald Pauli,Michael Gottfried,Stefan Dullinger,Otari Abdaladze,Maia Akhalkatsi,José Luis Benito Alonso,Gheorghe Coldea,Jan Dick,Brigitta Erschbamer,Rosa Fernández Calzado,Dany Ghosn,Jarle I. Holten,Robert Kanka,George Kazakis,Jozef Kollár,Per Larsson,Pavel Moiseev,Dmitry Moiseev,Ulf Molau,Joaquín Molero Mesa,Laszlo Nagy,G. Pelino,Mihai Puşcaş,Graziano Rossi,Angela Stanisci,Anne O. Syverhuset,Jean-Paul Theurillat,Marcello Tomaselli,Peter Unterluggauer,Luis Villar,Pascal Vittoz,Georg Grabherr +31 more