Data from: Plant controls on Late Quaternary whole ecosystem structure and function
Plants and animals influence biomass production and nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems; however their relative importance remains unclear. We assessed the extent to which mega-herbivore species controlled plant community composition and nutrient cycling, relative to other factors during and...
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Zusammenfassung: | Plants and animals influence biomass production and nutrient cycling in
terrestrial ecosystems; however their relative importance remains unclear.
We assessed the extent to which mega-herbivore species controlled plant
community composition and nutrient cycling, relative to other factors
during and after the Late Quaternary extinction event in Britain and
Ireland, when two-thirds of the region’s mega-herbivore species went
extinct. Warmer temperatures, plant-soil and plant-plant interactions, and
reduced burning contributed to the expansion of woody plants and declining
nitrogen availability in our five study ecosystems. Shrub biomass in
particular was consistently one of the strongest predictors of ecosystem
change, equaling or exceeding the effects of other biotic and abiotic
factors. In contrast, there was relatively little evidence for
mega-herbivore control on plant community composition and nitrogen
availability. The ability of plants to determine the fate of terrestrial
ecosystems during periods of global environmental change may therefore be
greater than previously thought. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.845n3f6 |