One of the greatest challenges that land managers face
today is anticipating how climate change will affect the diversity and
composition of ecological communities to develop effective strategies for
adaptation and mitigation. The direct effects of climate change on species via
changes in temperature and precipitation have been the focus of many studies.
Many conclude that altitudinal and latitudinal shifts in distribution will be
necessary to survive the impacts of predicted climate change.
Little attention, however, has been given to
how plant species on 'restricted' soil (i.e. very infertile) will respond to
climate change. Here, suitable habitats for such species are patchily
distributed, and the dispersal distances required to move to newly suitable
habitat are large, making successful migration unlikely. Are species confined
to low-nutrient soils, which may reflect their tolerance of such conditions and
intolerance of other biotic factors such as competition, particularly
vulnerable to climate change? Some
studies suggest that soil specialists may be at less risk than species on
'normal' soils due to their stress-tolerant functional traits, but there is
also contrary evidence.
Plant communities on low-nutrient soils have two
distinctive attributes that may cause them to respond uniquely to climate
change, and I don't think we've really thought about these factors as they pertain to climate change responses.
First, they are often found in discrete areas making them more
spatially isolated from one another than species on ‘normal’ soils that tend to
be more contiguous. Hence, this spatial isolation may make it much more difficult for
soil-specialist species to successfully migrate under climate change because suitable soils are isolated (or embedded in a hostile matrix to borrow an analogy from landscape ecology).
Second, because these
species are on unproductive substrates, they may differ from communities on
‘normal soils’ in terms of limiting resources, functional traits, and the
relative importance of disturbance, competition and other ecological processes.
Plants in these special soil habitats often have traits associated with
tolerance of drought and nutrient-limitation [e.g. small stature, low-specific
leaf area (SLA), high allocation to roots relative to shoots] because nutrient
availability is limited, water can be scarce, and soils may have additional
unusual chemistries (e.g. particularly acidic pH). Special soil communities are
often more strongly water-limited than others; therefore, they may be especially
responsive to changes in available precipitation. On the other hand, because
plants on special soils already have adaptations for stress tolerance, they may
be particularly well-suited to withstand climatic changes.
Prostanthera galbraithiae (Wellington Mint-bush) is an erect
to
spreading small shrub and is restricted to sandy
soils of the Holey Plains State Park, Victoria
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What are the potential responses to climate change of endemic plant species like the Wellington Mint-bush when soil factors appear to limit their current distribution?
To understand the role of climate factors on the fitness of soil specialists, it is necessary to compare the plasticity to water and temperature stress of the endemic Mint-bush to that of more widepread species (such as Prostanthera lasianthos, P. rotundifolia) to test the hypothesis that soil specialists are already well-adapted to environmental stress and hence, they may be particularly well-adapted to withstand climatic changes. Such studies, and life history study more generally, allows us to understand how plants respond to stress, and provides a powerful tool for making informed decisions about which species may need active intervention to ensure their persistence.
For species found in highly variable environments (such as those areas with frequent but unpredictable drought) where soil factors accentuate the magnitude of drought, a history of climate variability might confer rather general plasticity or tolerance of future climate variation. Coupled with having to persist on infertile soils, some species might show more resilience to change in climate than those species from much more stable/predictable climates (i.e. where factors such as rainfall are more evenly distributed through the year) because they already have to exhibit 'stress-tolerance' to survive their specialised soils. Hence, it would be useful to ask whether range-restricted, soil specialists like the Wellington Mint-bush are more plastic in their response to climate variability than widespread species (where local adaptation might have developed – i.e. the ‘provenance’ concept), or are they simply better adapted to environmental stress.
2 comments:
We have a similar situation in California in Serpentine soils. Makes for an interesting question in how serpentine endemics will respond to drought and increased temperatures as well as nitrogen deposition.
Thanks Courtney - it's the literature on the serpentine annuals, etc that has got me thinking about this and why it is relevant to Australian endemics. N deposition is POSSIBLY less of an issue for us here (because soils are strongly P-limited) but the changes in rainfall patterns (as well as drought per se) already seem to be happening. This spring we've missed out on rain almost completely in some areas (typically October is one of the wettest months) and as a consequence, some species I'm interested in seem like they will not flower at all. This is the 3rd year running this has happened. Thanks again for you comment,
JOHN
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