Authors
Amy M Iler, Toke T Høye, David W Inouye, Niels M Schmidt
Publication date
2013/8/19
Journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
368
Issue
1624
Pages
20120489
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Many alpine and subalpine plant species exhibit phenological advancements in association with earlier snowmelt. While the phenology of some plant species does not advance beyond a threshold snowmelt date, the prevalence of such threshold phenological responses within plant communities is largely unknown. We therefore examined the shape of flowering phenology responses (linear versus nonlinear) to climate using two long-term datasets from plant communities in snow-dominated environments: Gothic, CO, USA (1974–2011) and Zackenberg, Greenland (1996–2011). For a total of 64 species, we determined whether a linear or nonlinear regression model best explained interannual variation in flowering phenology in response to increasing temperatures and advancing snowmelt dates. The most common nonlinear trend was for species to flower earlier as snowmelt advanced, with either no change or a …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AM Iler, TT Høye, DW Inouye, NM Schmidt - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2013