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Article

Responses of Tundra plants to experimental warming: Meta-analysis of the International Tundra Experiment

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Citation

Wookey P, Arft AM, Walker MD, Gurevitch J, Alatalo JM, Bret-Harte S, Dale M, Diemer M, Gugerli F, Henry GHR, Jones MH, Hollister RD, Jonsdottir I, Laine K & Levesque E (1999) Responses of Tundra plants to experimental warming: Meta-analysis of the International Tundra Experiment. Ecological Monographs, 69 (4), pp. 491-511. https://doi.org/10.1890/0012-9615%281999%29069%5B0491%3AROTPTE%5D2.0.CO%3B2

Abstract
The International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) is a collaborative, multisite experiment using a common temperature manipulation to examine variability in species response across climatic and geographic gradients of tundra ecosystems. ITEX was designed specifically to examine variability in arctic and alpine species response to increased temperature. We compiled from one to four years of experimental data from 13 different ITEX sites and used meta-analysis to analyze responses of plant phenology, growth, and reproduction to experimental warming. Results indicate that key phenological events such as leaf bud burst and flowering occurred earlier in warmed plots throughout the study period; however, there was little impact on growth cessation at the end of the season. Quantitative measures of vegetative growth were greatest in warmed plots in the early years of the experiment, whereas reproductive effort and success increased in later years. A shift away from vegetative growth and toward reproductive effort and success in the fourth treatment year suggests a shift from the initial response to a secondary response. The change in vegetative response may be due to depletion of stored plant reserves, whereas the lag in reproductive response may be due to the formation of flower buds one to several seasons prior to flowering. Both vegetative and reproductive responses varied among life-forms; herbaceous forms had stronger and more consistent vegetative growth responses than did woody forms. The greater responsiveness of the herbaceous forms may be attributed to their more flexible morphology and to their relatively greater proportion of stored plant reserves. Finally, warmer, low arctic sites produced the strongest growth responses, but colder sites produced a greater reproductive response. Greater resource investment in vegetative growth may be a conservative strategy in the Low Arctic, where there is more competition for light, nutrients, or water, and there may be little opportunity for successful germination or seedling development. In contrast, in the High Arctic, heavy investment in producing seed under a higher temperature scenario may provide an opportunity for species to colonize patches of unvegetated ground. The observed differential response to warming suggests that the primary forces driving the response vary across climatic zones, functional groups, and through time.

Keywords
Arctic tundra; experimental warming; global change; global warming; International Tundra Experiment; ITEX; meta-analysis; plant response patterns; spatiotemporal gradients; tundra plants;

Notes
Additional co-authors: Marion GM, Molau U, Molgaard P, Nordenhall U, Raszhivin V, Robinson CH, Starr G, Stenstrom A, Stenstrom M, Totland O, Turner PL, Walker LJ, Webber PJ, Welker JM

Journal
Ecological Monographs: Volume 69, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date30/11/1999
Publication date online01/11/1999
Date accepted by journal05/01/1999
PublisherWiley
ISSN0012-9615

People (1)

Professor Philip Wookey

Professor Philip Wookey

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences