31 research outputs found

    Functional response of U.S. grasslands to the early 21st-century drought

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    Grasslands across the United States play a key role in regional livelihood and national food security. Yet, it is still unclear how this important resource will respond to the prolonged warm droughts and more intense rainfall events predicted with climate change. The early 21st-century drought in the southwestern United States resulted in hydroclimatic conditions that are similar to those expected with future climate change. We investigated the impact of the early 21st-century drought on aboveground net primary production (ANPP) of six desert and plains grasslands dominated by C4 (warm season) grasses in terms of significant deviations between observed and expected ANPP. In desert grasslands, drought-induced grass mortality led to shifts in the functional response to annual total precipitation (PT), and in some cases, new species assemblages occurred that included invasive species. In contrast, the ANPP in plains grasslands exhibited a strong linear function of the current-year PT and the previous-year ANPP, despite prolonged warm drought. We used these results to disentangle the impacts of interannual total precipitation, intra-annual precipitation patterns, and grassland abundance on ANPP, and thus generalize the functional response of C4 grasslands to predicted climate change. This will allow managers to plan for predictable shifts in resources associated with climate change related to fire risk, loss of forage, and ecosystem services. © 2014 by the Ecological Society of America

    Metabolic recovery of the Antarctic liverwort Cephaloziella varians during spring snowmelt

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    We measured the responses of pigments and chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters of the Antarctic leafy liverwort Cephaloziella varians to snowmelt during austral spring 2005 at Rothera Point on the western Antarctic Peninsula. Although no changes to the concentrations of UV-B photoprotective pigments were detected during snowmelt, chlorophyll and carotenoid concentrations and maximum photosystem (PS)II yield (F v /F m) were respectively 88, 60 and 144% higher in the tissues of the liverwort that had recently emerged from snow than in those under a 10 cm depth of snow. A laboratory experiment similarly showed that effective PSII yield increased rapidly within the first 45 min after plants sampled from under snow were removed to an illuminated growth cabinet. The pigmentation and PSII yields of plants during snowmelt were also compared with those of plants in January, during the middle of the growing season at Rothera Point. During snowmelt, plants had lower F v /F m values, chlorophyll a/b ratios and concentrations of UV-B photoprotective pigments and carotenoids than during mid-season, suggesting that although there is some recovery of PSII activity and increases in concentrations of photosynthetic pigments during snowmelt, the metabolism of C. varians is restricted during this period
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