Intraspecific trait variability is a key feature underlying high Arctic plant community resistance to climate warming

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  • Ingibjörg S. Jónsdóttir
  • Aud H. Halbritter
  • Casper T. Christiansen
  • Inge H.J. Althuizen
  • Siri V. Haugum
  • Jonathan J. Henn
  • Katrín Björnsdóttir
  • Brian Salvin Maitner
  • Yadvinder Malhi
  • Sean T. Michaletz
  • Ruben E. Roos
  • Kari Klanderud
  • Hanna Lee
  • Brian J. Enquist
  • Vigdis Vandvik

In the high Arctic, plant community species composition generally responds slowly to climate warming, whereas less is known about the community functional trait responses and consequences for ecosystem functioning. Slow species turnover and large distribution ranges of many Arctic plant species suggest a significant role of intraspecific trait variability in functional responses to climate change. Here, we compare taxonomic and functional community compositional responses to a long-term (17 years) warming experiment in Svalbard, replicated across three major high Arctic habitats shaped by topography and contrasting snow regimes. We observed taxonomic compositional changes in all plant communities over time. Still, responses to experimental warming were minor and most pronounced in the drier habitats with relatively early snowmelt timing and long growing seasons (Cassiope and Dryas heaths). The habitats were clearly separated in functional trait space, defined by twelve size- and leaf economics-related traits, primarily due to interspecific trait variation. Functional traits also responded to experimental warming, most prominently in the Dryas heath and mostly due to intraspecific trait variation. Leaf area and leaf mass increased, and leaf δ15N decreased in response to the warming treatment. Intraspecific trait variability ranged between 30% and 71% of the total trait variation, reflecting functional resilience of those communities, dominated by long-lived plants, due to either phenotypic plasticity or genotypic variation that most likely underlies the observed resistance of high Arctic vegetation to climate warming. We further explored the consequences of trait variability for ecosystem functioning by measuring peak season CO2 fluxes. Together, environmental, taxonomic, and functional trait variables explained a large proportion of the variation in net ecosystem exchange (NEE), which increased when intraspecific trait variation was accounted for. In contrast, even though ecosystem respiration and gross ecosystem production both increased in response to warming across habitats, they were mainly driven by the direct kinetic impacts of temperature on plant physiology and biochemical processes. Our study shows that long-term experimental warming has a modest but significant effect on plant community functional trait composition and suggests that intraspecific trait variability is a key feature underlying high Arctic ecosystem resistance to climate warming.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere1555
JournalEcological Monographs
Volume93
Issue number1
Number of pages21
ISSN0012-9615
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

CENPERMOA[2023]
Publisher Copyright:
This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

    Research areas

  • climate change, CO fluxes, community resilience, community resistance, experimental warming, intraspecific trait variation, plant community change, plant functional traits, Svalbard

ID: 332121802