Abstract

Boreal plants growing along the southern edge of their range on isolated mountains in a hot desert matrix live near the extreme of their physiological tolerance. Such plants are considered sensitive to small changes in climate. We coupled field observations (1974, 1993, 2019) about the abundance and vigor of small populations of ten remnant boreal plant species persisting in the uppermost elevations of spruce-fir forests of the Chiricahua Mountains, together with modeling of the species sensitivities to three stress factors associated with climatic change: warming, drought, and forest fire, in order to explore the persistence of frontier boreal plant species during climate change. We hypothesize that populations of these cryophilic plants have declined or become locally extinct during an adverse warming period since 1993, enforced by two large forest fires (1994, 2011). We used plant traits and principal component analysis to evaluate sensitivities of the studied plants to the combined actions of warming, drought, and forest fires. Our model predicted selective sensitivity to warming for two species: Vaccinium myrtillus and Rubus parviflorus. Other cryophilic species could be more sensitive to drought and fire. We surveyed the study area in 2019 and found eight of the ten previously investigated species still occur in the area. Five species occurred in wet canyons at lower elevations, but three species persisted in low vigor at the uppermost elevation, which was highly affected by fires. Neither warming-sensitive species showed signs of decline: populations of R. parviflorus increased in abundance and vigor, while V. myrtillus persists without significant changes since 1993. Despite the recorded increase in temperature in the study area >1 °C between years 1975–1993 and 1994–2019, our study did not find direct evidence of warming effects on the observed species. We conclude that severe wildfires and the multi-decadal decrease in precipitation rather than warming are the main limiting factors of remarkable but limited persistence of the remnant boreal species in the Chiricahua Mountains. Our study demonstrates how field observations can be combined with modeling to evaluate species selective responses to different environmental stress factors to make better environmental management decisions, particularly in light of climate change.

Highlights

  • Mean temperature in the study area increased by 1.2 C between years 1975e1993 and 1994e2019 (Fig. 2a) that is consistent with 0.27 C increase per decade (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2007)

  • We compared the historical and current abundance/vigor of ten remnant boreal plant species at high elevation in the Chiricahua Mountains referring to a 45-yrs time period (1974, 1993e1994 and 2019)

  • We found that all previously studied species except two still persist in the study area, five of them are in low vigor

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Summary

Introduction

Plant species growing under continuous climate fluctuations and persistent stresses have evolved strategies allowing them to survive such environmental changes. Such strategies include: (1) temporal persistence in refugia for rapid climate changes (Keppel et al, 2011); (2) shifting elevation or geographical range (migration) for slower changes (Kelly and Goulden, 2008; Lenoir et al, 2008; Morueta-Holme et al, 2015); and (3) physiological adaptations for slow climate changes if elevation or geographical range are limited (Siefert et al, 2015; Becklin et al, 2016). Surveys of remnant boreal plants growing near the extremes of their physiological tolerance could help to estimate the pressure of climate change on the biosphere and promote better understanding and protection of potential refuge areas for endangered species

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