Hedwall, Per-Ola
- Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2024Peer reviewedOpen access
Wei, Liping; Sanczuk, Pieter; De Pauw, Karen; Caron, Maria Mercedes; Selvi, Federico; Hedwall, Per-Ola; Brunet, Joerg; Cousins, Sara A. O.; Plue, Jan; Spicher, Fabien; Gasperini, Cristina; Iacopetti, Giovanni; Orczewska, Anna; Uria-Diez, Jaime; Lenoir, Jonathan; Vangansbeke, Pieter; De Frenne, Pieter
Climate change is pushing species towards and potentially beyond their critical thermal limits. The extent to which species can cope with temperatures exceeding their critical thermal limits is still uncertain. To better assess species' responses to warming, we compute the warming tolerance (Delta T-niche) as a thermal vulnerability index, using species' upper thermal limits (the temperature at the warm limit of their distribution range) minus the local habitat temperature actually experienced at a given location. This metric is useful to predict how much more warming species can tolerate before negative impacts are expected to occur. Here we set up a cross-continental transplant experiment involving five regions distributed along a latitudinal gradient across Europe (43 degrees N-61 degrees N). Transplant sites were located in dense and open forests stands, and at forest edges and in interiors. We estimated the warming tolerance for 12 understory plant species common in European temperate forests. During 3years, we examined the effects of the warming tolerance of each species across all transplanted locations on local plant performance, in terms of survival, height, ground cover, flowering probabilities and flower number. We found that the warming tolerance (Delta T-niche) of the 12 studied understory species was significantly different across Europe and varied by up to 8 degrees C. In general, Delta T-niche were smaller (less positive) towards the forest edge and in open stands. Plant performance (growth and reproduction) increased with increasing Delta T-niche across all 12 species. Our study demonstrated that Delta T-niche of understory plant species varied with macroclimatic differences among regions across Europe, as well as in response to forest microclimates, albeit to a lesser extent. Our findings support the hypothesis that plant performance across species decreases in terms of growth and reproduction as local temperature conditions reach or exceed the warm limit of the focal species.
climate change; cross-continental transplant experiment; forest ecosystems; microclimate; species traits; thermal niche; understory species; warming tolerance
Global Change Biology
2024, volume: 30, number: 1, article number: e17064
Publisher: WILEY
Forest Science
Climate Research
Ecology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/129263