Abstract

Abstract Climate change is expected to modify current ecological conditions sustaining the coexistence of species within cold‐adapted plant communities. It will primarily act upon the existing structure of communities, whose response should depend on the functional differences governing coexistence among alpine species. We postulated that a possible trade‐off between (1) plant growth in response to temperature, (2) plant competition and (3) resistance to herbivory, modulates the rate of plant community turnover under climate change. We reviewed the literature investigating functional traits variability within communities along elevation gradients. Despite environmental filtering, our review indicates that interspecific plant functional variation within communities does not necessarily decrease with elevation. While the diversity of traits related to abiotic affinities or competition are well documented, the variability in species resistance to herbivory within communities is poorly known. Using a Lotka–Volterra‐based model, we simulated the impact of climate change on plant communities through (1) a direct effect on plant growth and competition and (2) an indirect effect via an increase in herbivore pressure. We showed that different shapes of trade‐offs between temperature‐related growth, competition and resistance to herbivory modulate community turnover under climate change. We documented the existence of two independent trade‐offs axes using a detailed dataset of functional traits within two alpine grasslands in the European Alps. Plant competitive traits (i.e. leaf area and height) where negatively associated to cold tolerance, whereas traits of the leaf economic spectrum were associated to traits related to the physical resistance to herbivory. We propose that the immediate effect of climate change on alpine plant communities will depend on existing functional variability and how functional axes trade‐off with each other. Documenting ecological constraints between plant functional axes should provide indications to anticipate winners and losers in alpine plant communities. A plain language summary is available for this article.

Highlights

  • Climate change is already having pervasive effects on biodiversity across the globe (Grabherr, Gottfried & Pauli 1994; Parmesan 1996; Stange & Ayres 2001; Wilson et al 2004; Hoegh-Guldberg et al 2008; Burrows et al 2011; Pateman et al 2012; Pauli et al 2012a)

  • We found 22 cases reported in 18 studies that explicitly investigated the variation of functional diversity metrics along an elevation gradient, including functional diversity (FD), functional richness (Fric), functional divergence (Fdiv), functional dispersion (Fdis), functional evenness (Feve), functional attribute diversity (FAD), Rao’s quadratic entropy (Rao), and community weighted variance (CWV) (Table S1)

  • While several studies documented the functional diversity within plant communities (Table S1), we identified a lack of studies that quantified functional trade-offs within alpine communities, by integrating (i) temperature limitation, (ii) traits related to competition and (iii) resistance to herbivory

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Summary

Summary

1. Climate change is expected to modify current ecological conditions sustaining the coexistence of species within cold-adapted plant communities. Climate change is expected to modify current ecological conditions sustaining the coexistence of species within cold-adapted plant communities It will primarily act upon the existing structure of communities, whose response should depend on the functional differences governing coexistence among alpine species. We postulated that a possible trade-off between (i) plant growth in response to temperature, (ii) plant competition, and (iii) resistance to herbivory, modulates the rate of plant community turnover under climate change. While the diversity of traits related to abiotic affinities or competition are well documented, the variability in species resistance to herbivory within communities is poorly known. We showed that different shapes of trade-offs between temperature-related growth, competition and resistance to herbivory modulate community turnover under climate change. Key-words: Functional community ecology, temperature, competition, stress, global change, plant defences, secondary metabolites, insect herbivores

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