4.5 Article

Biomass compensation and plant responses to 7 years of plant functional group removals

期刊

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
卷 22, 期 3, 页码 503-515

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2011.01263.x

关键词

Biodiversity; Context dependence; Ecosystem function; Fertilization; Rare species; Removal experiment

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Killam Foundation
  3. Mountain Equipment Co-op Environment Fund
  4. Sigma-Xi
  5. Yukon College

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Question What is the role of functional group identity in determining community composition and dynamics? Location A natural grassland in Yukon Territory, Canada. Methods We selectively removed single plant functional groups (graminoids, forbs, legumes) to examine their effects on biomass compensation, the distribution of biomass among common and rare colonizing species, and plant species richness and diversity. Removals were conducted across two environmental treatments (fertilization and fungicide) to test if biomass compensation was context-dependent. Biomass was estimated non-destructively using point-intercept sampling. Results When graminoids or legumes were continuously removed, there was full biomass compensation by the remaining functional groups after 5 years, but only partial compensation when forbs were removed. Biomass compensation depended on the colonizing functional group; forbs showed no increase in biomass until 5 years after the removal of any functional group, but graminoids colonized quickly after removals. After any removal, the dominant species within each remaining functional group showed no compensatory growth, whereas the first subdominant forb and graminoid both increased in biomass. Rare species had a delayed response to removals; rare species biomass only increased beginning 5 years after removals. Context dependence was observed only in the response of subdominant species to removals, and these responses did not translate into context-dependent effects on total estimated biomass. Conclusion We show that the effects of losing a plant functional group depends both on the identity of the group removed and on the species remaining. In this northern grassland, most compensatory growth was by the subdominant species, which may determine the direction of community development in the long term.

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