Abstract

AbstractGlobal change is causing significant modifications to native plant communities. These effects can be direct through changes in productivity, or indirect through the spread of invading species. Identifying vital traits important for individual species’ response to environmental variation could be useful for making predictions about how entire communities may respond to global change. I studied the effects of factors associated with global change on the demography of an experimentally introduced species,Pityopsis aspera. In a Florida old‐field, I investigated how warming, increased soil nitrogen and thinning of the extant plant community affected survival, growth and reproduction ofP. asperausing a life table response experiment. The estimated population growth rate (λ) ofP. asperawas reduced by nitrogen addition, as a result of decreased fecundity. However,λincreased in response to the warming treatment, as a result of increased fecundity. In the presence of thinning, both warming and nitrogen served to increaseλas a result of an increase in the growth of young individuals. This experiment illustrates how different vital rates contribute to the population level responses of an experimentally introduced plant to warming, and nitrogen deposition. Results also show how these demographic responses may occur via indirect effects through established species. This work highlights the importance of studying interactions among temperature, soil nitrogen and demography across the entire life cycle in order to capture the complex and, often, non‐additive relationships mediating global change effects.

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