Research Articles

Greater responses of flower phenology of Kobresia pygmaea community to precipitation addition than to constant and stepwise warming

Expand
  • 1Key Laboratory of Alpine Ecology, Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;
    2Northwestern Institute of Plateau Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xining 810008, China;
    3College of Science, Tibet University, Lasa 850000, China;
    4CAS Center for Excellence in Tibetan Plateau Earth Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;
    5University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
These authors contributed equally to this work.

Received date: 2022-01-11

  Revised date: 2022-03-01

  Accepted date: 2022-05-10

  Online published: 2022-06-16

Abstract

There is a debate about unmatched results between manipulative warming using constant warming rates every year (CW) and long-term observations warming affect temperature sensitivity of flowering phenology. This may be because long-term observations represent the actual yearly increase in temperature (i.e. a yearly stepwise warming rate per year, SW) which would differ from CW and their effects would be regulated by precipitation alteration. We conducted a warming experiment with CW (temperature increase by +1 °C and sustained this elevated temperature for the duration of the study) and SW (temperature increase by + 0.25 °C progressively each year) with precipitation addition in an alpine grassland for four years. Our results showed that neither warming rate affected community flowering phenology. However, precipitation addition advanced onsets of flowering for early-spring flowering (ESF) and midsummer flowering (MSF) groups, and advanced the end date of flowering for ESF but delayed it for the MSF group. Therefore, flowering duration remained stable for the ESF group and prolonged for the MSF group, and further prolonging the flowering duration of the community. There were no interactions between warming rates and precipitation addition on the community’s flowering phenology. A severe drought in a year significantly decreased the maximal number of community flowers in the following year. Therefore, a change in precipitation has a greater effect than warming on the community flowering phenology in the semi-arid alpine grassland.

Cite this article

Bowen Li, Jianping Sun, Shiping Wang, Wangwang Lv, Yang Zhou, Peipei Liu, Qi Wang, Wang A, Suren Zhang, Lu Xia, Huan Hong, Lili Jiang, Caiyun Luo, Zhenhua Zhang, Shilong Piao, Yanfen Wang, Tsechoe Dorji . Greater responses of flower phenology of Kobresia pygmaea community to precipitation addition than to constant and stepwise warming[J]. Journal of Plant Ecology, 2023 , 16(2) : 0 -rtac066 . DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtac066

Outlines

/

752-9921/bottom_en.htm"-->