Geographic range predicts photosynthetic and growth response to warming in co-occurring tree species

  • Peter B. Reich
  • , Kerrie M. Sendall
  • , Karen Rice
  • , Roy L. Rich
  • , Artur Stefanski
  • , Sarah E. Hobbie
  • , Rebecca A. Montgomery

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    211 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Populations near the warm edge of species ranges may be particularly sensitive to climate change, but lack of empirical data on responses to warming represents a key gap in understanding future range dynamics. Herein we document the impacts of experimental warming on the performance of 11 boreal and temperate forest species that co-occur at the ecotone between these biomes in North America. We measured in situ net photosynthetic carbon gain and growth of >4,100 juvenile trees from local seed sources exposed to a chamberless warming experiment that used infrared heat lamps and soil heating cables to elevate temperatures by +3.4 °C above- and belowground for three growing seasons across 48 plots at two sites. In these ecologically realistic field settings, species growing nearest their warm range limit exhibited reductions in net photosynthesis and growth, whereas species near their cold range limit responded positively to warming. Differences among species in their three-year growth responses to warming parallel their photosynthetic responses to warming, suggesting that leaf-level responses may scale to whole-plant performance. These responses are consistent with the hypothesis, from observational data and models, that warming will reduce the competitive ability of currently dominant southern boreal species compared with locally rarer co-occurring species that dominate warmer neighbouring regions.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)148-152
    Number of pages5
    JournalNature Climate Change
    Volume5
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

    Keywords

    • North America
    • biotic communities
    • forest microclimatology
    • global warming
    • growth (plants)
    • photosynthesis

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