Literature DB >> 25736981

Temperature alone does not explain phenological variation of diverse temperate plants under experimental warming.

Renée M Marchin1,2, Carl F Salk3,4, William A Hoffmann2, Robert R Dunn5.   

Abstract

Anthropogenic climate change has altered temperate forest phenology, but how these trends will play out in the future is controversial. We measured the effect of experimental warming of 0.6-5.0 °C on the phenology of a diverse suite of 11 plant species in the deciduous forest understory (Duke Forest, North Carolina, USA) in a relatively warm year (2011) and a colder year (2013). Our primary goal was to dissect how temperature affects timing of spring budburst, flowering, and autumn leaf coloring for functional groups with different growth habits, phenological niches, and xylem anatomy. Warming advanced budburst of six deciduous woody species by 5-15 days and delayed leaf coloring by 18-21 days, resulting in an extension of the growing season by as much as 20-29 days. Spring temperature accumulation was strongly correlated with budburst date, but temperature alone cannot explain the diverse budburst responses observed among plant functional types. Ring-porous trees showed a consistent temperature response pattern across years, suggesting these species are sensitive to photoperiod. Conversely, diffuse-porous species responded differently between years, suggesting winter chilling may be more important in regulating budburst. Budburst of the ring-porous Quercus alba responded nonlinearly to warming, suggesting evolutionary constraints may limit changes in phenology, and therefore productivity, in the future. Warming caused a divergence in flowering times among species in the forest community, resulting in a longer flowering season by 10-16 days. Temperature was a good predictor of flowering for only four of the seven species studied here. Observations of interannual temperature variability overpredicted flowering responses in spring-blooming species, relative to our warming experiment, and did not consistently predict even the direction of flowering shifts. Experiments that push temperatures beyond historic variation are indispensable for improving predictions of future changes in phenology.
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  budburst; climate change; flowering; growing season length; leaf senescence; phenology; southeastern United States; temperature sensitivity; warming experiment

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25736981     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12919

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  8 in total

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2.  Phenological responses of temperate and boreal trees to warming depend on ambient spring temperatures, leaf habit, and geographic range.

Authors:  Rebecca A Montgomery; Karen E Rice; Artur Stefanski; Roy L Rich; Peter B Reich
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-04-27       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Warmest extreme year in U.S. history alters thermal requirements for tree phenology.

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Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2017-02-21       Impact factor: 3.225

4.  The shifting phenological landscape: Within- and between-species variation in leaf emergence in a mixed-deciduous woodland.

Authors:  Ella F Cole; Ben C Sheldon
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2017-01-24       Impact factor: 2.912

5.  Age-mediation of tree-growth responses to experimental warming in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau.

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Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-01-28       Impact factor: 2.912

6.  Spatiotemporal Variation of Osmanthus fragrans Phenology in China in Response to Climate Change From 1973 to 1996.

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7.  Inter-Individual Budburst Variation in Fagus sylvatica Is Driven by Warming Rate.

Authors:  Andrey V Malyshev; Ernst van der Maaten; Aron Garthen; Dennis Maß; Matthias Schwabe; Juergen Kreyling
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8.  Earlier snowmelt and warming lead to earlier but not necessarily more plant growth.

Authors:  Carolyn Livensperger; Heidi Steltzer; Anthony Darrouzet-Nardi; Patrick F Sullivan; Matthew Wallenstein; Michael N Weintraub
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  8 in total

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