Microhabitats associated with solar energy development alter demography of two desert annuals
Political and economic initiatives intended to increase energy production while reducing carbon emissions are driving demand for solar energy. Consequently, desert regions are now targeted for development of large-scale photovoltaic solar energy facilities. Where vegetation communities are left inta...
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Zusammenfassung: | Political and economic initiatives intended to increase energy production
while reducing carbon emissions are driving demand for solar energy.
Consequently, desert regions are now targeted for development of
large-scale photovoltaic solar energy facilities. Where vegetation
communities are left intact or restored within facilities, ground-mounted
infrastructure may have negative impacts on desert-adapted plants because
it creates novel rainfall runoff and shade conditions. We used
experimental solar arrays in the Mojave Desert to test how these altered
conditions affect population dynamics for a closely related pair of native
annual plants: rare Eriophyllum mohavense and common E. wallacei. We
estimated aboveground demographic rates (seedling emergence, survivorship,
and fecundity) over seven years and used seed bank survival rates from a
concurrent study to build matrix models of population growth in three
experimental microhabitats. In drier years, shade tended to reduce
survival of the common species, but increase survival of the rare species.
In a wet year, runoff from panels tended to increase seed output for both
species. Population growth projections from microhabitat-specific matrix
models showed stronger effects of microhabitat under wetter conditions,
and relatively little effect under dry conditions (lack of rainfall was an
overwhelming constraint). Performance patterns across microhabitats in the
wettest year differed between rare and common species. Projected growth of
E. mohavense was substantially reduced in shade, mediated by negative
effects on aboveground demographic rates. Hence, the rare species was more
susceptible to negative effects of panel infrastructure in wet years that
are critical to seed bank replenishment. Our results suggest that altered
shade and water runoff regimes associated with energy infrastructure will
have differential effects on demographic transitions across annual species
and drive population-level processes that determine local abundance,
resilience, and persistence. |
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DOI: | 10.7291/d1st01 |