Authors
Ellen A Smith, Emily M Holden, Charlotte Brown, James F Cahill Jr
Publication date
2022/3/25
Journal
PeerJ
Volume
10
Pages
e13179
Publisher
PeerJ, Inc.
Description
Background
Localized disturbances within grasslands alter biological properties and may shift species composition. For example, rare species in established communities may become dominant in successional communities if they exhibit traits well-suited to disturbance conditions. Although the idea that plant species exhibit different trait ‘strategies’ is well established, it is unclear how ecological selection for specific traits may change as a function of disturbance. Further, there is little data available testing whether disturbances select for single trait-characters within communities (homogenization), or allow multiple trait-types to persist (diversification). We investigated how (a) traits and (b) functional diversity of post-disturbance gap communities compared to those in adjacent undisturbed grasslands, and (c) if altered functional diversity resulted in the homogenization or diversification of functional traits.
Methods
Here we emulate the impacts of an extreme disturbance in a native grassland site. We measured plant community composition of twelve paired 50× 50 cm plots (24 total) in Alberta, Canada. Each pair consisted of one undisturbed plot and one which had all plants terminated 2 years prior. We used species abundances and a local trait database to calculate community weighted means for maximum height, specific leaf area, specific root length, leaf nitrogen percent, and root nitrogen percent. To test the impacts of disturbance on community functional traits, we calculated functional diversity measures and compared them between disturbed and undisturbed communities.
Results
Within 2 years, species richness and evenness in disturbed …
Total citations
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