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Impacts of experimental warming and fire on phenology of subalpine open-heath species

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AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
卷 56, 期 8, 页码 617-629

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CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/BT08018

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  1. Australian Research Council Linkage [LP0348897]

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The present study examined experimentally the phenological responses of a range of plant species to rises in temperature. We used the climate-change field protocol of the International Tundra Experiment (ITEX), which measures plant responses to warming of 1 to 2 degrees C inside small open-topped chambers. The field study was established on the Bogong High Plains, Australia, in subalpine open heathlands; the mostcommon treeless plant community on the Bogong High Plains. The study included areas burnt by. re in 2003, and therefore considers the interactive effects of warming and. re, which have rarely been studied in high mountain environments. From November 2003 to March 2006, various phenological phases were monitored inside and outside chambers during the snow-free periods. Warming resulted in earlier occurrence of key phenological events in 7 of the 14 species studied. Burning altered phenology in 9 of 10 species studied, with both earlier and later phenological changes depending on the species. There were no common phenological responses to warming or burning among species of the same family, growth form or flowering type (i.e. early or late-flowering species), when all phenological events were examined. The proportion of plants that formed flower buds was influenced by. re in half of the species studied. The findings support previous findings of ITEX and other warming experiments; that is, species respond individualistically to experimental warming. The inter-year variation in phenological response, the idiosyncratic nature of the responses to experimental warming among species, and an inherent resilience to. re, may result in community resilience to short-term climate change. In the first 3 years of experimental warming, phenological responses do not appear to be driving community-level change. Our findings emphasise the value of examining multiple species in climate-change studies.

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