Data from: Plant communities, populations and individuals have distinct responses to short-term warming and neighbour biomass removal in two montane grasslands
Aims Climate change will impact plant communities and populations but also individual plant performance. Most predictive models of community responses to climate change ignore individual‐level biotic interactions despite their known importance for community diversity and functioning. Here, we consid...
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Zusammenfassung: | Aims Climate change will impact plant communities and populations but also
individual plant performance. Most predictive models of community
responses to climate change ignore individual‐level biotic interactions
despite their known importance for community diversity and functioning.
Here, we consider plant fitness and diversity responses to climate change
associated factors at three organisational levels: communities,
populations and individual plants, to increase our understanding of how
plant communities respond to climate change. Location Montane grassland,
Tasmania, Australia. Methods In two plant communities, we manipulated
temperature using open‐top chambers and removed random and dominant
species biomass. Two years after experimental manipulations, we assessed
the impact of treatments on species diversity, community‐ and
population‐level functional traits and individual plant fitness. Results
Species diversity was affected by warming in one of the two communities,
while community‐level functional trait diversity metrics were unaffected
by treatments. Mean community trait values were strongly impacted by
dominant species biomass removal in both communities, notably increasing
specific leaf area (SLA) and specific root length. SLA showed the
strongest population‐level trait response, with higher values found in
warmed plots and lower values found in dominant species biomass removal
plots. Neighbours had a stronger competitive effect on individual plant
fitness in warmed compared to unwarmed conditions at the higher‐elevation
site and facilitation was common in both communities. Conclusions We
demonstrated that over short time scales, plant communities respond to
experimental warming and biomass removal across multiple organisational
levels. Competitive and facilitative interactions played a significant
role in determining fitness outcomes, but competitive interactions
dominated under warmed conditions. We highlight the importance of
local‐scale biotic interactions in mediating individual responses to
warming and recommend their inclusion in future studies of how climate
change will impact the long‐term structure and function of plant
communities through short‐term impacts on individual plant fitness. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.sf7m0cg3g |