Arid
DOI10.3732/ajb.1200463
UNDERSTANDING PAST, CONTEMPORARY, AND FUTURE DYNAMICS OF PLANTS, POPULATIONS, AND COMMUNITIES USING SONORAN DESERT WINTER ANNUALS
Huxman, Travis E.1,2; Kimball, Sarah1,2; Angert, Amy L.3; Gremer, Jennifer R.4; Barron-Gafford, Greg A.4; Venable, D. Lawrence4
通讯作者Huxman, Travis E.
来源期刊AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
ISSN0002-9122
EISSN1537-2197
出版年2013
卷号100期号:7页码:1369-1380
英文摘要

Global change requires plant ecologists to predict future states of biological diversity to aid the management of natural communities, thus introducing a number of significant challenges. One major challenge is considering how the many interacting features of biological systems, including ecophysiological processes, plant life histories, and species interactions, relate to performance in the face of a changing environment. We have employed a functional trait approach to understand the individual, population, and community dynamics of a model system of Sonoran Desert winter annual plants. We have used a comprehensive approach that connects physiological ecology and comparative biology to population and community dynamics, while emphasizing both ecological and evolutionary processes. This approach has led to a fairly robust understanding of past and contemporary dynamics in response to changes in climate. In this community, there is striking variation in physiological and demographic responses to both precipitation and temperature that is described by a trade-off between water-use efficiency (WUE) and relative growth rate (RGR). This community-wide trade-off predicts both the demographic and life history variation that contribute to species coexistence. Our framework has provided a mechanistic explanation to the recent warming, drying, and climate variability that has driven a surprising shift in these communities: cold-adapted species with more buffered population dynamics have increased in relative abundance. These types of comprehensive approaches that acknowledge the hierarchical nature of biology may be especially useful in aiding prediction. The emerging, novel and nonstationary climate constrains our use of simplistic statistical representations of past plant behavior in predicting the future, without understanding the mechanistic basis of change.


英文关键词desert annual plants functional traits global change growth rate photosynthesis species coexistence water-use efficiency
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA ; Canada
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000321766600012
WOS关键词CLIMATE-CHANGE ; LONG-TERM ; TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS ; DELAYED GERMINATION ; TEMPORAL VARIATION ; DIE-OFF ; COEXISTENCE ; VARIABILITY ; MECHANISMS ; MORTALITY
WOS类目Plant Sciences
WOS研究方向Plant Sciences
来源机构University of Arizona
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/175646
作者单位1.Univ Calif Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697 USA;
2.Univ Calif Irvine, Ctr Environm Biol, Irvine, CA 92697 USA;
3.Univ British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada;
4.Univ Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Huxman, Travis E.,Kimball, Sarah,Angert, Amy L.,et al. UNDERSTANDING PAST, CONTEMPORARY, AND FUTURE DYNAMICS OF PLANTS, POPULATIONS, AND COMMUNITIES USING SONORAN DESERT WINTER ANNUALS[J]. University of Arizona,2013,100(7):1369-1380.
APA Huxman, Travis E.,Kimball, Sarah,Angert, Amy L.,Gremer, Jennifer R.,Barron-Gafford, Greg A.,&Venable, D. Lawrence.(2013).UNDERSTANDING PAST, CONTEMPORARY, AND FUTURE DYNAMICS OF PLANTS, POPULATIONS, AND COMMUNITIES USING SONORAN DESERT WINTER ANNUALS.AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY,100(7),1369-1380.
MLA Huxman, Travis E.,et al."UNDERSTANDING PAST, CONTEMPORARY, AND FUTURE DYNAMICS OF PLANTS, POPULATIONS, AND COMMUNITIES USING SONORAN DESERT WINTER ANNUALS".AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY 100.7(2013):1369-1380.
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