Abstract

Woody plant encroachment into grasslands is a major land cover change taking place in many regions of the world, including arctic, alpine and desert ecosystems. This change in plant dominance is also affecting coastal ecosystems, including barrier islands, which are known for being vulnerable to the effects of climate change. In the last century, the woody plant species Morella cerifera L. (Myricaceae), has encroached into grass covered swales in many of the barrier islands of Virginia along the Atlantic seaboard. The abrupt shift to shrub cover in these islands could result from positive feedbacks with the physical environment, though the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. We use a combination of experimental and modeling approaches to investigate the role of climate warming and the ability of M. cerifera to mitigate its microclimate thereby leading to the emergence of alternative stable states in barrier island vegetation. Nighttime air temperatures were significantly higher in myrtle shrublands than grasslands, particularly in the winter season. The difference in the mean of the 5% and 10% lowest minimum temperatures between shrubland and grassland calculated from two independent datasets ranged from 1.3 to 2.4°C. The model results clearly show that a small increase in near-surface temperature can induce a non-linear shift in ecosystem state from a stable state with no shrubs to an alternative stable state dominated by M. cerifera. This modeling framework improves our understanding and prediction of barrier island vegetation stability and resilience under climate change, and highlights the existence of important nonlinearities and hystereses that limit the reversibility of this ongoing shift in vegetation dominance.

Highlights

  • Vegetation cover has important influences on the nearsurface atmospheric conditions, including temperature, humidity, boundary layer stability, and rainfall formation (Geiger 1965, Pielke et al 1998, Bonan 2008, Li et al 2016)

  • A major change in land cover taking place in many regions of the world is associated with the encroachment of woody plants into grasslands, a phenomenon that has been observed in arctic, alpine, desert, and coastal ecosystems (Archer et al 1995, Chapin et al 2000, Maher et al 2005, Bader et al 2007, Knapp et al 2008, McKee and Rooth 2008, Ravi et al 2009)

  • This study focused on Hog Island (37°400 N, 75°400 W), a barrier island within the Virginia Coast Reserve Long-Term Ecological Research site (VCR LTER)

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Summary

Introduction

Vegetation cover has important influences on the nearsurface atmospheric conditions, including temperature, humidity, boundary layer stability, and rainfall formation (Geiger 1965, Pielke et al 1998, Bonan 2008, Li et al 2016). A major change in land cover taking place in many regions of the world is associated with the encroachment of woody plants into grasslands, a phenomenon that has been observed in arctic, alpine, desert, and coastal ecosystems (Archer et al 1995, Chapin et al 2000, Maher et al 2005, Bader et al 2007, Knapp et al 2008, McKee and Rooth 2008, Ravi et al 2009).

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