More warm‐adapted species in soil seed banks than in herb layer plant communities across Europe

Author:

Auffret Alistair G.1ORCID,Vangansbeke Pieter2ORCID,De Frenne Pieter2ORCID,Auestad Inger3ORCID,Basto Sofía4ORCID,Grandin Ulf5ORCID,Jacquemyn Hans6ORCID,Jakobsson Anna7,Kalamees Rein89,Koch Marcus A.10ORCID,Marrs Rob11,Marteinsdóttir Bryndís12ORCID,Wagner Markus13,Bekker Renée M.14,Bruun Hans Henrik15ORCID,Decocq Guillaume16ORCID,Hermy Martin17,Jankowska‐Błaszczuk Małgorzata18ORCID,Milberg Per19ORCID,Måren Inger E.20ORCID,Pakeman Robin J.21ORCID,Phoenix Gareth K.22ORCID,Thompson Ken22ORCID,Van Calster Hans23ORCID,Vandvik Vigdis20ORCID,Plue Jan24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

2. Forest & Nature Lab Department of Environment Faculty of Bioscience Engineering Ghent University Melle‐Gontrode Belgium

3. Department of Environmental Sciences Western Norway University of Applied Sciences Sogndal Norway

4. Unidad de Ecología y Sistemática Departamento de Biología Facultad de Ciencias Pontificia Universidad Javeriana Bogotá Colombia

5. Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

6. Plant Conservation and Population Biology Biology Department KU Leuven Heverlee Belgium

7. Division of Educational Science and Languages University West Trollhättan Sweden

8. Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences University of Tartu Tartu Estonia

9. Tallinn Botanic Garden Tallinn Estonia

10. Centre for Organismal Studies (COS) Heidelberg Department of Biodiversity and Plant Systematics Heidelberg University Heidelberg Germany

11. School of Environmental Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

12. The Soil Conservation Service of Iceland Hella Iceland

13. UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Wallingford UK

14. Groningen Institute of Archaeology University of Groningen Groningen The Netherlands

15. Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Ø Denmark

16. Jules Verne University of Picardie Amiens Cedex 1 France

17. Dept. Earth & Environmental Sciences KU Leuven Heverlee Belgium

18. Environmental Biology Department Jan Kochanowski University in Kielce Kielce Poland

19. IFM Biology Linköping University Linköping Sweden

20. Department of Biological Sciences University of Bergen Bergen Norway

21. The James Hutton Institute Aberdeen UK

22. School of Biosciences University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

23. Research Institute for Nature and Forest Brussels Belgium

24. Swedish Biodiversity Centre Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Responses to climate change have often been found to lag behind the rate of warming that has occurred. In addition to dispersal limitation potentially restricting spread at leading range margins, the persistence of species in new and unsuitable conditions is thought to be responsible for apparent time‐lags. Soil seed banks can allow plant communities to temporarily buffer unsuitable environmental conditions, but their potential to slow responses to long‐term climate change is largely unknown. As local forest cover can also buffer the effects of a warming climate, it is important to understand how seed banks might interact with land cover to mediate community responses to climate change. We first related species‐level seed bank persistence and distribution‐derived climatic niches for 840 plant species. We then used a database of plant community data from grasslands, forests and intermediate successional habitats from across Europe to investigate relationships between seed banks and their corresponding herb layers in 2763 plots in the context of climate and land cover. We found that species from warmer climates and with broader distributions are more likely to have a higher seed bank persistence, resulting in seed banks that are composed of species with warmer and broader climatic distributions than their corresponding herb layers. This was consistent across our climatic extent, with larger differences (seed banks from even warmer climates relative to vegetation) found in grasslands. Synthesis. Seed banks have been shown to buffer plant communities through periods of environmental variability, and in a period of climate change might be expected to contain species reflecting past, cooler conditions. Here, we show that persistent seed banks often contain species with relatively warm climatic niches and those with wide climatic ranges. Although these patterns may not be primarily driven by species' climatic adaptations, the prominence of such species in seed banks might still facilitate climate‐driven community shifts. Additionally, seed banks may be related to ongoing trends regarding the spread of widespread generalist species into natural habitats, while cool‐associated species may be at risk from both short‐ and long‐term climatic variability and change.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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