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DOI10.1111/geb.12915
Extinction debt and delayed colonization have had comparable but unique effects on plant community-climate lags since the Last Glacial Maximum
Butterfield, Bradley J.1; Anderson, R. Scott2; Holmgren, Camille A.3; Betancourt, Julio L.4,5
发表日期2019
ISSN1466-822X
EISSN1466-8238
卷号28期号:8页码:1067-1077
英文摘要

Aim Plant communities typically exhibit lagged responses to climate change due to poorly understood effects of colonization and local extinction. Here, we quantify rates of change in mean cold tolerances, and contributions of colonization and local extinction to those rates, recorded in plant macrofossil assemblages from North American hot deserts over the last 30,000 years. Location Mojave, Sonoran and Chihuahuan Deserts. Time period 30-0 thousand years before present (kybp). Major taxa studied Vascular plants. Methods Colonization and local extinction dates for 269 plant species were approximated from macrofossils in 15 packrat (Neotoma) midden series. Cold tolerances estimated from contemporary climate were used to quantify assemblage-mean cold tolerances through time. Rates of colonization and local extinction, and their effects on rates of change in assemblage-mean cold tolerances, were estimated for 30-20 kybp (Late Pleistocene, no directional warming), 20-10 kybp (deglaciation, rapid warming) and 10-0 kybp (Holocene, no directional warming). Results Rates of change in all metrics were negligible during the Late Pleistocene. Rates of change in assemblage-mean cold tolerances (mean 1.0 degrees C x 10(-4)/yr) lagged behind warming during deglaciation, and continued at similar rates (1.2 degrees C x 10(-4)/yr) throughout the Holocene. Colonization and local extinction contributed equally to delayed responses to warming, but their dynamics differed through time: Colonization by warm-adapted species predominated during deglaciation, while the most heat-adapted species exhibited long delays in colonization. Only the most cold-adapted species went locally extinct during deglaciation, followed by slow repayment of the extinction debt of cool-adapted species during the Holocene. Main conclusions Responses to rapid warming can persist for millennia, even after cessation of warming. Consistent patterns from different midden series across the region support a metacommunity model in which dispersal interacts with environmental filters and buffers against local extinction to drive community-climate disequilibrium during and after periods of warming.


WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Physical Geography
来源期刊GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/100905
作者单位1.No Arizona Univ, Ctr Ecosyst Sci & Soc, Dept Biol Sci, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 USA;
2.No Arizona Univ, Sch Earth & Sustainabil, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 USA;
3.SUNY Buffalo, State Coll, Geog & Planning Dept, Buffalo, NY USA;
4.US Geol Survey, Sci & Decis Ctr, 959 Natl Ctr, Reston, VA 22092 USA;
5.Univ Maryland, Earth Syst Sci Interdisciplinary Ctr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
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Butterfield, Bradley J.,Anderson, R. Scott,Holmgren, Camille A.,et al. Extinction debt and delayed colonization have had comparable but unique effects on plant community-climate lags since the Last Glacial Maximum[J],2019,28(8):1067-1077.
APA Butterfield, Bradley J.,Anderson, R. Scott,Holmgren, Camille A.,&Betancourt, Julio L..(2019).Extinction debt and delayed colonization have had comparable but unique effects on plant community-climate lags since the Last Glacial Maximum.GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY,28(8),1067-1077.
MLA Butterfield, Bradley J.,et al."Extinction debt and delayed colonization have had comparable but unique effects on plant community-climate lags since the Last Glacial Maximum".GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY 28.8(2019):1067-1077.
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