Abstract

The availability of sufficient and diverse resources across time is important for maintenance of biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. In this study, we examine the potential for variation in environmental conditions across topographic gradients to extend floral resource timing. Flowering time on a landscape may vary across topography due to differences in abiotic factors, species turnover, or genotypic differences. However, the extent to which this variation in phenology affects overall flowering duration on a landscape, and the components of diversity that influence flowering duration, are unexplored. We investigate whether differences in flowering time due to topography yield an overall extension in duration of flowering resources in a northern California grassland. We recorded flowering time of pollinator resource species across four successive spring growing seasons (2015–2018) on paired north and south aspects. Flowering time differences were evaluated both at the community level and within species present on both paired aspects. The role of plasticity was examined in an experimental case study using genotypes of Lasthenia gracilis. We found that aspect is a strong determinant of phenology, with earlier flowering on warmer south‐facing slopes. Aspect differences resulted in complementarity in timing of flowering resources across sites, as aspects that started flowering earlier also ended earlier. Complementarity between north and south aspects served to extend the flowering time of pollinator resources by an average of 4–8 days (8%–15%), depending on the year. This extension can be attributed to both within‐species responses to aspect differences and species turnover. Flowering of L. gracilis genotypes was distinct across aspects, demonstrating that plasticity can drive the extension of flowering duration. Our findings indicate that heterogeneous topography can extend overall flowering time of pollinator resources, which may support pollinator biodiversity. Extension was most pronounced at the community level, which incorporates species turnover as well as plastic and genotypic differences within species.

Highlights

  • Sufficient and diverse resource availability across time is important for biodiversity and ecosystem functioning

  • By measuring both community-level and species-level components of flowering differences across topographic gradients, we can examine the components of diversity that contribute to observed patterns of flowering time

  • We investigate how heterogeneous topography influences the duration of flowering time across the landscape, and decompose the components that may lead to an extension in timing within and among the grassland species

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Sufficient and diverse resource availability across time is important for biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Slope and aspect temperature and moisture differences can be ecologically significant across even moderate topography, driving vegetation patterns and ecosystem processes (Bennie, Huntley, Wiltshire, Hill, & Baxter, 2008) These effects may influence community flowering time across the landscape by affecting individual species timing and species turnover. Extensions in flowering time can be generated by population plasticity, genotypic heterogeneity (Smith et al, 2015), and species turnover (Timberlake, Vaughan, & Memmott, 2019; reviewed in: Olliff-Yang, Gardali, & Ackerly, 2020) By measuring both community-level and species-level components of flowering differences across topographic gradients, we can examine the components of diversity that contribute to observed patterns of flowering time. If topographic heterogeneity lengthens flowering time duration on a landscape, it may serve to support species interactions in responding to climate changes

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
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| DISCUSSION
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