3 research outputs found
Responses of flowering phenology of snowbed plants to an experimentally imposed extreme advanced snowmelt
In snowbed habitats, characterized by a
long-lasting snow cover, the timing of snowmelt can
be included among the major factors controlling plant
phenology. Nevertheless, only a few ecological studies
have tested the responses of flowering phenology
of species growing in very late snow-free habitats to an
advanced snowmelt (AS) date. The aim of this study
was to determine the impacts of an extremely earlier
melt-out of snow on flowering phenology of vascular
plant species inhabiting an alpine snowbed. The study
was conducted in the high Gavia Valley (Italy,
2,700 m a.s.l.). On 30th May 2012, we removed
manually the snow cover and set up an experiment
with 5 AS and 5 control plots. Phenological observations
of the most abundant vascular species were
conducted every 4–6 days. Moreover, we calculated
cumulative soil temperature and recorded the mortality
of reproductive structures of three species. For
several species flowering occurred earlier, and the
prefloration period was extended in the AS treatment
in comparison with the control. For the majority of
species, cumulative soil temperatures in the AS
treatment and the control were comparable, confirming
that temperature exerts the main control on the
flowering of the species inhabiting snowbeds. Earlier
flowering species resulted more affected by an AS date
in comparison with later flowering species. The
mortality of reproductive structures did not increase
in the AS treatments in comparison with the control
suggesting that few and weak frost events in late
spring do not affect the survival of reproductive
structures of the species studied