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Sökning: swepub > Lantbruksvetenskap > Wardle David

  • Resultat 1-10 av 177
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2.
  • Sundqvist, Maja K., et al. (författare)
  • Contrasting nitrogen and phosphorus dynamics across an elevational gradient for subarctic tundra heath and meadow vegetation
  • 2014
  • Ingår i: Plant and Soil. - : Springer Netherlands. - 0032-079X .- 1573-5036. ; 383:1-2, s. 387-399
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This study explores soil nutrient cycling processes and microbial properties for two contrasting vegetation types along an elevational gradient in subarctic tundra to improve our understanding of how temperature influences nutrient availability in an ecosystem predicted to be sensitive to global warming. We measured total amino acid (Amino-N), mineral nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations, in situ net N and P mineralization, net Amino-N consumption, and microbial biomass C, N and P in both heath and meadow soils across an elevational gradient near Abisko, Sweden. For the meadow, NH4 (+) concentrations and net N mineralization were highest at high elevations and microbial properties showed variable responses; these variables were largely unresponsive to elevation for the heath. Amino-N concentrations sometimes showed a tendency to increase with elevation and net Amino-N consumption was often unresponsive to elevation. Overall, PO4-P concentrations decreased with elevation and net P immobilization mostly occurred at lower elevations; these effects were strongest for the heath. Our results reveal that elevation-associated changes in temperature can have contrasting effects on the cycling of N and P in subarctic soils, and that the strength and direction of these effects depend strongly on dominant vegetation type.
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3.
  • Pérez-Izquierdo, Leticia, et al. (författare)
  • Fire severity as a key determinant of aboveground and belowground biological community recovery in managed even-aged boreal forests
  • 2023
  • Ingår i: Ecology and Evolution. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 2045-7758. ; 13:5
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Changes in fire regime of boreal forests in response to climate warming are expected to impact postfire recovery. However, quantitative data on how managed forests sustain and recover from recent fire disturbance are limited.Two years after a large wildfire in managed even-aged boreal forests in Sweden, we investigated how recovery of aboveground and belowground communities, that is, understory vegetation and soil microbial and faunal communities, responded to variation in the severity of soil (i.e., consumption of soil organic matter) and canopy fires (i.e., tree mortality).While fire overall enhanced diversity of understory vegetation through colonization of fire adapted plant species, it reduced the abundance and diversity of soil biota. We observed contrasting effects of tree- and soil-related fire severity on survival and recovery of understory vegetation and soil biological communities. Severe fires that killed overstory Pinus sylvestris promoted a successional stage dominated by the mosses Ceratodon purpureus and Polytrichum juniperinum, but reduced regeneration of tree seedlings and disfavored the ericaceous dwarf-shrub Vaccinium vitis-idaea and the grass Deschampsia flexuosa. Moreover, high tree mortality from fire reduced fungal biomass and changed fungal community composition, in particular that of ectomycorrhizal fungi, and reduced the fungivorous soil Oribatida. In contrast, soil-related fire severity had little impact on vegetation composition, fungal communities, and soil animals. Bacterial communities responded to both tree- and soil-related fire severity.Synthesis: Our results 2 years postfire suggest that a change in fire regime from a historically low-severity ground fire regime, with fires that mainly burns into the soil organic layer, to a stand-replacing fire regime with a high degree of tree mortality, as may be expected with climate change, is likely to impact the short-term recovery of stand structure and above- and belowground species composition of even-aged P. sylvestris boreal forests.
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5.
  • Giesler, Reiner, et al. (författare)
  • Boreal Forests Sequester Large Amounts of Mercury over Millennial Time Scales in the Absence of Wildfire
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Environmental Science and Technology. - : American Chemical Society (ACS). - 0013-936X .- 1520-5851. ; 51:5, s. 2621-2627
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Alterations in fire activity due to climate change and fire suppression may have profound effects on the balance between storage and release of carbon (C) and associated volatile elements. Stored soil mercury (Hg) is known to volatilize due to wildfires and this could substantially affect the land air exchange of Hg; conversely the absence of fires and human disturbance may increase the time period over which Hg is sequestered. Here we show for a wildfire chronosequence spanning over more than 5000 years in boreal forest in northern Sweden that belowground inventories of total Hg are strongly related to soil humus C accumulation (R-2 = 0.94, p < 0.001). Our data clearly show that northern boreal forest soils have a strong sink capacity for Hg, and indicate that the sequestered Hg is bound in soil organic matter pools accumulating over millennia. Our results also suggest that more than half of the Hg stock in the sites with the longest time since fire originates from deposition predating the onset of large-scale anthropogenic emissions. This study emphasizes the importance of boreal forest humus soils for Hg storage and reveals that this pool is likely to persist over millennial time scales in the prolonged absence of fire.
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6.
  • Vincent, Andrea, et al. (författare)
  • Soil phosphorus forms show only minor changes across a 5000-year-old boreal wildfire chronosequence
  • 2022
  • Ingår i: Biogeochemistry. - : Springer. - 0168-2563 .- 1573-515X. ; 159, s. 15-32
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Wildfire is the main disturbance in most boreal forests. In the prolonged absence of wildfire, ecosystem retrogression occurs, which is characterized by reduced productivity, plant biomass and belowground process rates. Previous evidence suggests that phosphorus (P) decreases during retrogression, but the mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. Here we use 1-D 31P and 2-D, 1H-31P NMR to characterize changes in humus P composition across a 5000 year post-fire chronosequence in northern Sweden, to understand why P availability declines during long term fire absence. Against expectations, humus P composition varied only modestly with increasing time since fire. Using a method to back-calculate the in situ soil organic P speciation, we found that it was dominated by biologically active compounds such as RNA (41%), phospholipids (28%) and DNA (22%). The concentration of DNA and pyrophosphate was 19% and 29% lower, respectively, on infrequently burnt than recently burnt islands, and the concentration of DNA, phospholipids and nucleotides was positively correlated with net primary productivity (NPP). Given the lack of evidence for the accumulation of “recalcitrant” P or a geochemical P sink, reductions in P availability during retrogression may be associated with impaired P cycling through slower decomposition rates, and increasing humus depth separating surface humus from P-rich mineral soil. Our findings align with observed negative relationships between NPP and organic P concentration across other chronosequences. They also suggest that changing fire regimes in the boreal zone could indirectly affect the P cycle through changes in NPP and soil microflora rather than through changes in humus P composition.
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7.
  • Wardle, David, et al. (författare)
  • Linking vegetation change, carbon sequestration and biodiversity : insights from island ecosystems in a long-term natural experiment
  • 2012
  • Ingår i: Journal of Ecology. - Malden, USA : Wiley-Blackwell. - 0022-0477 .- 1365-2745. ; 100:1, s. 16-30
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • 1. Despite recent interest in linkages between above- and below-ground communities and their consequences for ecosystem processes, much remains unknown about their responses to long-term ecosystem change. We synthesize multiple lines of evidence from a long-term natural experiment to illustrate how ecosystem retrogression (the decline in ecosystem process rates due to long-term absence of major disturbance) drives vegetation change, and thus above-ground and below-ground carbon (C) sequestration, and communities of consumer biota.
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8.
  • Ibáñez, T. S., et al. (författare)
  • Mid-term effects of wildfire and salvage logging on gross and net soil nitrogen transformation rates in a Swedish boreal forest
  • 2022
  • Ingår i: Forest Ecology and Management. - : Elsevier BV. - 0378-1127 .- 1872-7042. ; 517
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Wildfires are natural and important disturbances of boreal forest ecosystems, and they are expected to increase in parts of the boreal zone through climate warming. There is a broad understanding of the immediate effects of fire on soil nitrogen (N) transformation rates, but less is known about these effects several years after fire. In July 2014, a large wildfire in the boreal forest zone of Central Sweden took place. Four years after the wildfire, we measured processes linked to the soil N cycle using the 15N pool dilution method (for gross N mineralization, consumption and nitrification) and the buried bags method (for net N mineralization), in soils from stands of different fire severity that had or had not been subjected to salvage logging. Gross N mineralization and consumption rates per unit carbon (C) increased by 81 % and 85 % respectively, in response to high fire severity, and nitrification rates per unit C basis decreased by 69 % in response to high fire severity, while net N mineralization was unresponsive. There was no difference in the effect of salvage logging across stands of differing fire severity on N transformation rates, although concentrations of resin adsorbed nitrate (NO3–) were overall 50 % lower in logged compared to unlogged stands. We also found that irrespective of burn severity, N immobilization rates exceeded N nitrification rates, and immobilization was therefore the dominant pathway of gross N consumption. Gross N consumption rates were higher in burned than unburned stands, despite there being a higher active microbial biomass in unburned soil, which suggests an even higher immobilization of N over time as the microbial biomass recovers following fire. Our study shows that soil N transformation rates were more affected by changes in fire severity than by salvage logging, and that four years after the fire many aspects of the N cycle did not differ between burned and unburned stands, suggesting substantial resilience of the N cycle to fire and salvage logging. However, we note that long term impact and many additional ecosystem properties or processes should be evaluated before concluding that salvage logging has no ecosystem impact. Furthermore, shortened fire regimes following climate warming accompanied with shorter intervals between salvage logging practices, could still impact the capability for the N cycle to recover after an intense fire. While wildfire in the boreal region results in a shift from nutrient conserving to nutrient demanding plant species, our results suggest this shift is dependent on a relatively short-lived pulse of higher N cycling processes that would have likely dissipated within a few years after the fire.
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9.
  • Siefert, Andrew, et al. (författare)
  • A global meta-analysis of the relative extent of intraspecific trait variation in plant communities
  • 2015
  • Ingår i: Ecology Letters. - : Wiley. - 1461-023X .- 1461-0248. ; 18:12, s. 1406-1419
  • Forskningsöversikt (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Recent studies have shown that accounting for intraspecific trait variation (ITV) may better address major questions in community ecology. However, a general picture of the relative extent of ITV compared to interspecific trait variation in plant communities is still missing. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis of the relative extent of ITV within and among plant communities worldwide, using a data set encompassing 629 communities (plots) and 36 functional traits. Overall, ITV accounted for 25% of the total trait variation within communities and 32% of the total trait variation among communities on average. The relative extent of ITV tended to be greater for whole-plant (e.g. plant height) vs. organ-level traits and for leaf chemical (e.g. leaf N and P concentration) vs. leaf morphological (e.g. leaf area and thickness) traits. The relative amount of ITV decreased with increasing species richness and spatial extent, but did not vary with plant growth form or climate. These results highlight global patterns in the relative importance of ITV in plant communities, providing practical guidelines for when researchers should include ITV in trait-based community and ecosystem studies.
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10.
  • Sundqvist, Maja K., et al. (författare)
  • Interactive effects of vegetation type and elevation on aboveground and belowground properties in a subarctic tundra
  • 2011
  • Ingår i: Oikos. - Copenhagen : Munksgaard. - 0030-1299 .- 1600-0706. ; 120:1, s. 128-142
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • An improved knowledge of how contrasting types of plant communities and their associated soil biota differ in their responses to climatic variables is important for better understanding the future impacts of climate change on terrestrial ecosystems. Elevational gradients serve as powerful study systems for answering questions on how ecological processes can be affected by changes in temperature and associated climatic variables. In this study, we evaluated how plant and soil microbial communities, and abiotic soil properties, change with increasing elevation in subarctic tundra in northern Sweden, for each of two dominant but highly contrasting vegetation types, namely heath (dominated by woody dwarf shrubs) and meadow (dominated by herbaceous species). To achieve this, we measured plant community characteristics, microbial community properties and several soil abiotic properties for both vegetation types across an elevation gradient of 500 to 1000 m. We found that the two vegetation types differed not only in several above- and belowground properties, but also in how these properties responded to elevation, pointing to important interactive effects between vegetation type and elevation. Specifically, for the heath, available soil nitrogen and phosphorus decreased with elevation whereas fungal dominance increased, while for the meadow, idiosyncratic responses to elevation for these variables were found. These differences in belowground responses to elevation among vegetation types were linked to shifts in the species and functional group composition of the vegetation. Our results highlight that these two dominant vegetation types in subarctic tundra differ greatly not only in fundamental aboveground and belowground properties, but also in how these properties respond to elevation and are therefore likely to be influenced by temperature. As such they highlight that vegetation type, and the soil abiotic properties that determine this, may serve as powerful determinants of how both aboveground and belowground properties respond to strong environmental gradients.
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