Decoupling of trait and species turnover in fire‐prone Mediterranean plant communities

Author:

Navarro‐Cano Jose Antonio1ORCID,Goberna Marta1ORCID,Pérez‐Valera Eduardo2ORCID,Verdú Miguel3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Medio Ambiente y Agronomía Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), CSIC Madrid Spain

2. Agroecologie Department University Bourgogne Franche‐Comte, INRAE, Institut Agro Dijon Dijon France

3. Centro de Investigaciones Sobre Desertificación (CIDE), CSIC‐UV‐GV Moncada Spain

Abstract

Abstract Plant taxa and traits do not necessarily show synchronous responses to ecological disturbance. Based on the observation that taxonomically over‐diversified communities might be phenotypically redundant, we speculated that taxonomic and phenotypic community reassembly might be decoupled after fire in Mediterranean ecosystems. We applied a multi‐trait approach to describe plant community re‐assembly after fire across three 20‐year chronosequences based on 117 species and 23 traits, including whole‐plant, above‐ground and below‐ground traits. We quantified the post‐fire trajectories of different plant traits by analysing their community‐weighted means individually. We estimated the short‐ and long‐term phenotypic diversity of burned plots based on sets of traits. We also tested if trait and species turnover are decoupled across post‐fire trajectories. Finally, we calculated phenotypic redundancy, and assessed if above‐ and below‐ground traits have contrasted responses during post‐fire community reassembly. Individually, 16 out of 23 traits were affected by fire in the short term. Plant phenotypic diversity (stdMPD) decreased immediately after fire, driven by changes in whole‐ and above‐ground traits. Both whole‐ and above‐ground stdMPD in burned plots described positive trajectories across the chronosequences tending to converge with long‐unburned plots, whereas below‐ground stdMPD remained unaltered through time. Taxonomic and phenotypic beta diversity showed decoupled trajectories due to a larger species than trait replacement across time since fire. Finally, overall phenotypic redundancy of the studied plant communities described a regressive trajectory, similarly to above‐ground traits, whereas root traits kept a steady phenotypic redundancy through time. Synthesis. We provide evidence that above‐ and below‐ground traits describe different recovery trajectories after fire, with significant effects on the phenotypic redundancy of plant communities. Our results encourage the use of multi‐trait approaches to understand how the plant reassembly operates after disturbance, in order to refine ecological theory. This strategy might improve the efficacy of restoration programs through a functional approach to species selection.

Funder

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Generalitat Valenciana

Publisher

Wiley

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