Species occurrence and richness of lichen, bryophytes and vascular plants near Abisko, Sweden and Toolik lake, Alaska

Little is known about the impact of changing temperature regimes on composition and diversity of cryptogam communities in the Arctic and Subarctic, despite the well-known importance of lichens and bryophytes to the functioning and climate feedbacks of northern ecosystems. We investigated changes in diversity and abundance of lichens and bryophytes within long-term (9-16 years) warming experiments and along natural climatic gradients, ranging from Swedish subarctic birch forest and subarctic/subalpine tundra to Alaskan arctic tussock tundra. In both Sweden and Alaska, lichen diversity responded negatively to experimental warming (with the exception of a birch forest) and to higher temperatures along climatic gradients. Bryophytes were less sensitive to experimental warming than lichens, but depending on the length of the gradient, bryophyte diversity decreased both with increasing temperatures and at extremely low temperatures. Among bryophytes, Sphagnum mosses were particularly resistant to experimental warming in terms of both abundance and diversity. Temperature, on both continents, was the main driver of species composition within experiments and along gradients, with the exception of the Swedish subarctic birch forest where amount of litter constituted the best explanatory variable. In a warming experiment in moist acidic tussock tundra in Alaska, temperature together with soil ammonium availability were the most important factors influencing species composition. Overall, dwarf shrub abundance (deciduous and evergreen) was positively related to warming but so were the bryophytes Sphagnum girgensohnii, Hylocomium splendens and Pleurozium schreberi; the majority of other cryptogams showed a negative relationship to warming. This unique combination of intercontinental comparison, natural gradient studies and experimental studies shows that cryptogam diversity and abundance, especially within lichens, is likely to decrease under arctic climate warming. Given the many ecosystem processes affected by cryptogams in high latitudes (e.g. carbon sequestration, N2-fixation, trophic interactions), these changes will have important feedback consequences for ecosystem functions and climate.

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Lang, Simone I, Cornelissen, Johannes H C, Shaver, Gauis R, Ahrens, Matthias, Callaghan, Terry V, Molau, Ulf, ter Braak, Cajo J F, Hölzer, Adam, Aerts, Rien (2012). Dataset: Species occurrence and richness of lichen, bryophytes and vascular plants near Abisko, Sweden and Toolik lake, Alaska. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.815208

DOI retrieved: 2012

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.815208
Author Lang, Simone I
Given Name Simone I
Family Name Lang
More Authors
Cornelissen, Johannes H C
Shaver, Gauis R
Ahrens, Matthias
Callaghan, Terry V
Molau, Ulf
ter Braak, Cajo J F
Hölzer, Adam
Aerts, Rien
Source Creation 2012
Publication Year 2012
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Lang_2012
Subject Areas
Name: Ecology

Related Identifiers
Title: Arctic warming on two continents has consistent negative effects on lichen diversity and mixed effects on bryophyte diversity
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2011.02570.x
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2012
Source: Global Change Biology
Authors: Lang Simone I , Cornelissen Johannes H C , Shaver Gauis R , Ahrens Matthias , Callaghan Terry V , Molau Ulf , ter Braak Cajo J F , Hölzer Adam , Aerts Rien .