15 research outputs found
The romanian grassland database (RGD): Historical background, current status and future perspectives
Less favourable climates constrain demographic strategies in plants
Correlative species distribution models are based on the observed relationship between species’ occurrence and macroclimate or other environmental variables. In climates predicted less favourable populations are expected to decline, and in favourable climates they are expected to persist. However, little comparative empirical support exists for a relationship between predicted climate suitability and population performance. We found that the performance of 93 populations of 34 plant species worldwide – as measured by in situ population growth rate, its temporal variation and extinction risk – was not correlated with climate suitability. However, correlations of demographic processes underpinning population performance with climate suitability indicated both resistance and vulnerability pathways of population responses to climate: in less suitable climates, plants experienced greater retrogression (resistance pathway) and greater variability in some demographic rates (vulnerability pathway). While a range of demographic strategies occur within species’ climatic niches, demographic strategies are more constrained in climates predicted to be less suitable
GrassPlot v. 2.00 – first update on the database of multi-scale plant diversity in Palaearctic grasslands
Abstract: GrassPlot is a collaborative vegetation-plot database organised by the Eurasian Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) and listed in the Global Index of Vegetation-Plot Databases (GIVD ID EU-00-003). Following a previous Long Database Report (Dengler et al. 2018, Phyto- coenologia 48, 331–347), we provide here the first update on content and functionality of GrassPlot. The current version (GrassPlot v. 2.00) contains a total of 190,673 plots of different grain sizes across 28,171 independent plots, with 4,654 nested-plot series including at least four grain sizes. The database has improved its content as well as its functionality, including addition and harmonization of header data (land use, information on nestedness, structure and ecology) and preparation of species composition data. Currently, GrassPlot data are intensively used for broad-scale analyses of different aspects of alpha and beta diversity in grassland ecosystems
Phenotypic plasticity masks range-wide genetic differentiation for vegetative but not reproductive traits in a short-lived plant
Publication history: Accepted - 19 May 2021; Published - 5 August 2021.Genetic differentiation and phenotypic plasticity jointly shape intraspecific trait
variation, but their roles differ among traits. In short-lived
plants, reproductive
traits may be more genetically determined due to their impact on fitness, whereas
vegetative traits may show higher plasticity to buffer short-term
perturbations.
Combining a multi-treatment
greenhouse experiment with observational field
data throughout the range of a widespread short-lived
herb, Plantago lanceolata,
we (1) disentangled genetic and plastic responses of functional traits to a set of
environmental drivers and (2) assessed how genetic differentiation and plasticity
shape observational trait–environment
relationships. Reproductive traits showed
distinct genetic differentiation that largely determined observational patterns, but
only when correcting traits for differences in biomass. Vegetative traits showed
higher plasticity and opposite genetic and plastic responses, masking the genetic
component underlying field-observed
trait variation. Our study suggests that genetic
differentiation may be inferred from observational data only for the traits
most closely related to fitness.Eesti Teadusagentuur, Grant/Award
Number: PRG609 and PUT1409; Academy
of Finland; Natural Sciences and
Engineering Research Council of Canada;
Science Foundation Ireland, Grant/Award
Number: 15/ERCD/2803; Spanish Ministry
of Science, Innovation and Universities,
Grant/Award Number: IJCI-2017-
32039;
European Regional Development Fun
Data from: A synthesis of transplant experiments and ecological niche models suggests that range limits are often niche limits
This fileset contains scripts, input files and intermediate output files for an analysis of whether species geographic range limits are niche limits based on ecological niche models and over-the-edge transplant experiments