| Literature DB >> 36196543 |
Rutger A Wilschut1,2, Jonathan R De Long2,3, Stefan Geisen2,4, S Emilia Hannula2,5, Casper W Quist2,6, Basten Snoek2,7, Katja Steinauer2, E R Jasper Wubs2,8, Qiang Yang2,9, Madhav P Thakur2,10.
Abstract
Global warming and precipitation extremes (drought or increased precipitation) strongly affect plant primary production and thereby terrestrial ecosystem functioning. Recent syntheses show that combined effects of warming and precipitation extremes on plant biomass are generally additive, while individual experiments often show interactive effects, indicating that combined effects are more negative or positive than expected based on the effects of single factors. Here, we examined whether variation in biomass responses to single and combined effects of warming and precipitation extremes can be explained by plant growth form and community type. We performed a meta-analysis of 37 studies, which experimentally crossed warming and precipitation treatments, to test whether biomass responses to combined effects of warming and precipitation extremes depended on plant woodiness and community type (monocultures versus mixtures). Our results confirmed that the effects of warming and precipitation extremes were overall additive. However, combined effects of warming and drought on above- and belowground biomass were less negative in woody- than in herbaceous plant systems and more negative in plant mixtures than in monocultures. We further show that drought effects on plant biomass were more negative in greenhouse, than in field studies, suggesting that greenhouse experiments may overstate drought effects in the field. Our results highlight the importance of plant system characteristics to better understand plant responses to climate change.Entities:
Keywords: aboveground plant biomass; belowground plant biomass; climate warming; global change experiments; precipitation decrease; precipitation increase
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36196543 PMCID: PMC9533002 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.530
Figure 1Mean effect sizes ± 95% CIs for experimental warming and drought effects on aboveground (upper effect sizes) and belowground (lower effect sizes) plant biomass. Warming and drought effects are significant when CIs do not overlap with zero. The values next to effect sizes stand for the number of studies and the number of unique cases, respectively. (Online version in colour.)
Effect size (Hedge's g) and standard errors (s.e.) of individual and interactive effects of warming and precipitation extremes (drought and increased precipitation) on aboveground and belowground plant biomass. Heterogenity test statistics Q, combined with respective degrees of freedom and p-value, are also provided. The effect of study identity as random intercept in our models is listed as their variance. Italicized effect sizes are statistically significant.
| effect size (s.e.) | CIs (95%) | test for heterogeneity ( | d.f. | variance component (study) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| aboveground biomass | ||||||
| warming (W) | 0.103 (0.223) | −0.347, 0.553 | 176.492 | 79 | <0.001 | 0.931 |
| drought (D) | 219.174 | 79 | <0.001 | 1.248 | ||
| W × D | 0.027 (0.110) | −0.188, 0.243 | 132.762 | 79 | <0.001 | 0.179 |
| warming (W) | −0.123 (0.138) | −0.395, 0.148 | 55.545 | 43 | 0.095 | 0.096 |
| precipitation increase (P) | 61.848 | 43 | 0.031 | 0.258 | ||
| W × P | −0.119 (0.094) | −0.303, 0.065 | 65.983 | 43 | 0.013 | 0.042 |
| belowground biomass | ||||||
| warming (W) | −0.101 (0.240) | −0.571, 0.368 | 73.692 | 34 | <0.001 | 0.547 |
| drought (D) | −0.049 (0.094) | −0.233, 0.135 | 25.593 | 34 | 0.849 | 0.000 |
| W × D | 0.087 (0.111) | −0.132, 0.306 | 39.973 | 34 | 0.221 | 0.081 |
| warming (W) | 0.015 (0.338) | −0.647, 0.678 | 21.037 | 10 | 0.020 | 0.549 |
| precipitation increase (P) | 0.174 (0.186) | −0.189, 0.539 | 7.587 | 10 | 0.347 | 0.009 |
| W × P | −0.100 (0.130) | −0.356, 0.156 | 6.708 | 10 | 0.752 | 0.000 |
Figure 2Mean effect sizes ± 95% CIs for experimental warming and increased precipitation on aboveground (upper effect sizes) and belowground (lower effect sizes) plant biomass. Warming and increased precipitation effects are significant when CIs do not overlap with zero. The values next to effect sizes stand for the number of studies and the number of unique cases, respectively. (Online version in colour.)
Figure 3Sum of Akaike weights of four moderator variables from multi-level meta-analytic models for biomass responses in experiments examining warming and drought effects. The higher the Akaike weights, the greater is the importance of the variable in explaining the variation of an effect size. The statistical significance of a given moderator variable is indicated by an asterisk, and when those without any asterisk sign are non-significant. Asterisks represent p-values < 0.05 (*) or p-values < 0.01 (**). (Online version in colour.)
Figure 4(a) Difference in the warming × drought interaction effect size between woody and herbaceous (non-woody) plant responses. (b) Difference in the warming × drought interaction effect size between plant monocultures and mixed plant communities. Positive or negative values indicate combined effects that are more positive or negative than expected based on single effects, respectively. Asterisks represent p-values < 0.05 (*) or p-values < 0.01 (**). Boxplots show the median effect size (horizontal line), first and third quartiles (rectangle), 1.5 × interquartile range (whiskers) and all effect sizes (as black dots). (Online version in colour.)
Figure 5Sum of Akaike weights of four moderator variables from multi-level meta-analytic models for biomass responses in experiments examining warming and increased precipitation effects. The higher the Akaike weights, the greater is the importance of the variable in explaining the variation of an effect size. (Online version in colour.)