Academic Journal

Marine-derived nutrients shape the functional composition of High Arctic plant communities

Bibliographic Details
Title: Marine-derived nutrients shape the functional composition of High Arctic plant communities
Authors: Roos, Ruben E., Kemppinen, Julia, Niittynen, Pekka, Vandvik, Vigdis, Althuizen, Inge, Eidesen, Pernille Bronken, Enquist, Brian J., Gabrielsen, Geir Wing, Henn, Jonathan J., Jonsdottir, Ingibjorg S., Klanderud, Kari, Lang, Simone I., Lepley, Kai, Macias-Fauria, Marc, Maitner, Brian S., Malhi, Yadvinder, Michaletz, Sean T., Telford, Richard J., Bass, Polly, Castorena, Matiss, Haugum, Siri Vatso, Li, Yaoqi, Linabury, Mary C., Neto-Bradley, Barbara M., Ng, Molly, Pankova, Karolina, Spiegel, Marcus P., Thomson, Eleanor R., Vilca-Bustamante, Lucely L., Halbritter, Aud H.
Contributors: Botany and Mycology Unit, Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme
Publisher Information: Wiley Blackwell, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: Svalbard, Seabirds, Species turnover, Ecology, evolutionary biology, Nutrient enrichment, Plant functional traits, Intraspecific trait variation
Description: Low temperatures and nutrient limitation have shaped Arctic plant communities, which are now affected by biome-wise changes in both climate and nutrient cycling. Rising temperatures are favouring taller plant species with more resource-acquisitive traits across the Arctic tundra. Simultaneously, declines in seabird populations may reduce subsidies of marine-derived nutrients to terrestrial ecosystems, potentially favouring more resource-conservative plant traits. It is crucial to understand the consequences of these concurrent changes in climate and marine-derived nutrient inputs from seabirds for the functional composition and roles of Arctic plant communities.We use a 'space-for-time approach' to compare the functional composition of vascular plant communities across two elevational gradients in High Arctic Svalbard, one where climate is the major environmental driver and one influenced by nutrient input from a seabird colony. We assess changes in 13 traits related to plant size, leaf economics and nutrient cycling along the two gradients, and we also explore the relative contributions of species turnover and intraspecific variation to total trait variation across and between the gradients.Elevation per se had little impact on the plant functional composition. Instead, plants at the top of the seabird nutrient gradient, closest to the nesting sites, were taller and had resource-acquisitive trait values, such as larger and thicker leaves and higher leaf nutrient contents. Enriched soil delta N-15 parts per thousand signatures at these sites correlated with resource-acquisitive values of leaf area, specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content, leaf phosphorous content and with enriched leaf delta N-15 parts per thousand signatures. This variation in leaf economic traits and isotopes was largely driven by intraspecific variation at the nutrient gradient, whereas species turnover dominated at the reference gradient.Our results are consistent with marine-derived nutrient subsidies from seabirds being a major driver of functional trait variation in Arctic vegetation. Ongoing declines in seabird populations may therefore affect terrestrial primary producer communities in the Arctic and beyond, with potentially important but unknown implications for biodiversity, consumer and decomposer communities, and ecosystem processes.
Document Type: Article
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Access URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/596287
Accession Number: edsair.od......1593..73b3030a4f3b10728cc13de97df7cba1
Database: OpenAIRE
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