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Climate warming disrupts mast seeding and its fitness benefits in European beech
Authors
A Buechling
A Monks
+60 more
A Satake
A Satake
A Satake
AJ Dore
AJ Hacket-Pain
AL Angert
AS Jump
CM Zohner
D Kelly
D Kelly
D Kelly
D Kelly
D Kelly
E Tipping
EE Crone
G Elliott
G Piovesan
G Vacchiano
G Vacchiano
G-R Walther
I Drobyshev
I-C Chen
IS Pearse
IS Pearse
J Clement
J Penuelas
J Peñuelas
J Szymkowiak
J-F Bastin
JM Espelta
JM Rapp
JR Packham
K Verheyen
KA Schmidt
M Bogdziewicz
M Bogdziewicz
M Bogdziewicz
M Bogdziewicz
M Bogdziewicz
M Fernández-Martínez
M Fernández-Martínez
M Fernández-Martínez
M Rees
ME Brooks
Michał Bogdziewicz
MJ McKone
MT Sykes
R Seidl
R Zwolak
RC Cornes
RS Ostfeld
SG Nilsson
SJ Richardson
TS Jensen
WD Koenig
WD Koenig
WD Koenig
X Moreira
Y Tachiki
YB Linhart
Publication date
1 February 2020
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
© 2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. Many plants benefit from synchronous year-to-year variation in seed production, called masting. Masting benefits plants because it increases the efficiency of pollination and satiates predators, which reduces seed loss. Here, using a 39-year-long dataset, we show that climate warming over recent decades has increased seed production of European beech but decreased the year-to-year variability of seed production and the reproductive synchrony among individuals. Consequently, the benefit that the plants gained from masting has declined. While climate warming was associated with increased reproductive effort, we demonstrate that less effective pollination and greater losses of seeds to predators offset any benefits to the plants. This shows that an apparently simple benefit of climate warming unravels because of complex ecological interactions. Our results indicate that in masting systems, the main beneficiaries of climate-driven increases in seed production are seed predators, not plants
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Last time updated on 11/03/2020
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E-space: Manchester Metropolitan University's Research Repository
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Last time updated on 26/03/2020