Literature DB >> 28554116

Riparian vegetation in the alpine connectome: Terrestrial-aquatic and terrestrial-terrestrial interactions.

Dragos G Zaharescu1, Antonio Palanca-Soler2, Peter S Hooda3, Catalin Tanase4, Carmen I Burghelea5, Richard N Lester6.   

Abstract

Alpine regions are under increased attention worldwide for their critical role in early biogeochemical cycles, their high sensitivity to environmental change, and as repositories of natural resources of high quality. Their riparian ecosystems, at the interface between aquatic and terrestrial environments, play important geochemical functions in the watershed and are biodiversity hotspots, despite a harsh climate and topographic setting. With climate change rapidly affecting the alpine biome, we still lack a comprehensive understanding of the extent of interactions between riparian surface, lake and catchment environments. A total of 189 glacial - origin lakes were surveyed in the Central Pyrenees to test how key elements of the lake and terrestrial environments interact at different scales to shape riparian plant composition. Secondly, we evaluated how underlying ecotope features drive the formation of natural communities potentially sensitive to environmental change and assessed their habitat distribution. At the macroscale, vegetation composition responded to pan-climatic gradients altitude and latitude, which captured in a narrow geographic area the transition between large European climatic zones. Hydrodynamics was the main catchment-scale factor connecting riparian vegetation with major water fluxes, followed by topography and geomorphology. Lake sediment Mg and Pb, and water Mn and Fe contents reflected local influences from mafic bedrock and soil water saturation. Community analysis identified four keystone ecosystems: (i) damp ecotone, (ii) snow bed-silicate bedrock, (iii) wet heath, and (iv) calcareous substrate. These communities and their connections with ecotope elements could be at risk from a number of environmental change factors including warmer seasons, snow line and lowland species advancement, increased nutrient/metal input and water level fluctuations. The results imply important natural terrestrial-aquatic linkages in the riparian environment at a wide range of scales, which could help better address further biomic impacts of environmental change.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alpine lakes; Catchment heterogeneity; Ecotope; Fuzzy set ordination; Indicator species analysis; Plant composition

Year:  2017        PMID: 28554116     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.05.135

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  2 in total

1.  Plant-soil interactions and C:N:P stoichiometric homeostasis of plant organs in riparian plantation.

Authors:  Dongdong Ding; Muhammad Arif; Minghui Liu; Jiajia Li; Xin Hu; Qianwen Geng; Fan Yin; Changxiao Li
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-08-01       Impact factor: 6.627

2.  Ecosystem-bedrock interaction changes nutrient compartmentalization during early oxidative weathering.

Authors:  Dragos G Zaharescu; Carmen I Burghelea; Katerina Dontsova; Jennifer K Presler; Edward A Hunt; Kenneth J Domanik; Mary K Amistadi; Shana Sandhaus; Elise N Munoz; Emily E Gaddis; Miranda Galey; María O Vaquera-Ibarra; Maria A Palacios-Menendez; Ricardo Castrejón-Martinez; Estefanía C Roldán-Nicolau; Kexin Li; Raina M Maier; Christopher T Reinhard; Jon Chorover
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-10-18       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

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