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Traits and functions of alpine plant communities respond strongly but not always sufficiently to in situ climate change. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

Increasing climate warming and summer droughts are known to affect mountain plant communities, their functional traits and life strategies. However, little is known about how strongly and efficiently communities respond to climate change, and how tightly plant responses are linked to responses of ecosystem functions. To test this, we transplanted alpine plant communities to subalpine conditions, exposing them to warming and drying. We compared these transplanted communities to alpine and subalpine control communities to assess their responses. Five years after transplantation, we found slower growth (e.g. lower leaf nitrogen) and more outsourcing strategies (e.g. lower specific root length) in the warmer and drier subalpine control communities compared to the alpine controls, probably due to drought. Traits of warmed alpine communities shifted toward subalpine controls. However, neither below- nor aboveground traits nor productivity of plants fully acclimated to subalpine conditions. Nevertheless, standard litter decomposition rates, arbuscular colonization and bacterial biomass showed no acclimation lag to the subalpine controls. Significant but insufficient acclimation of plant functional traits and strategies is prone to result in maladapted plant productivity, impairing competitiveness with better adapted subalpine species and leading to the temporally delayed loss of ecosystem features specific to alpine environments.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.70503DOI Listing

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