Abstract

:In order to assess the influence of experimental warming on individual species response, species composition and richness, and the abundance of ramets in a wet late-melting snowbed, we established 20 open-top chambers (OTCs) permanently for 5 y (six growing seasons) at Finse, southwest Norway. Salix herbacea, Saxifraga stellaris, Omalotheca supina, Cerastium cerastoides, and Epilobium anagallidifolium increased in the experimentally warmed plots, while there was no significant response in Carex lachenalii, Deschampsia alpina, Poa alpina, Juncus biglumis, Saxifraga rivularis, or Veronica alpina. Species composition changed significantly with time both in the OTCs and in the control plots. Although invasion rates slightly increased in the OTCs compared to the controls, differences in overall species composition or richness were not significant between the OTCs and the control plots during the 5-y study. Our results suggest that vegetation change is going on naturally and that the effect of this change overrides the effect of the temperature treatment. We conclude that increased plant growth will result in denser vegetation in a warmer future. Whether the higher net invasion will result in more diverse vegetation is yet unclear, as the processes take more time than allowed for in this study.

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