Trait variation in juvenile plants from the soil seed bank of temperate forests in relation to macro‐ and microclimate

Author:

Gasperini Cristina123ORCID,Carrari Elisa1ORCID,Govaert Sanne2ORCID,Meeussen Camille2ORCID,De Pauw Karen2ORCID,Plue Jan4ORCID,Sanczuk Pieter2ORCID,Vanneste Thomas2ORCID,Vangansbeke Pieter2ORCID,Iacopetti Giovanni1ORCID,De Frenne Pieter2ORCID,Selvi Federico13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry University of Florence Florence Italy

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

3. National Biodiversity Future Center Palermo Italy

4. IVL Swedish Environmental Institute Stockholm Sweden

Abstract

AbstractAimThe soil seed bank is a key component of the biodiversity of plant communities, but various aspects of its functioning in temperate forest ecosystems are still unknown. We here adopted a trait‐based approach to investigate the effects of macro‐ and microclimatic gradients on the juvenile plant communities from the realized seed bank of two types of European temperate forest.LocationOak‐dominated forests in Italy and Belgium.MethodsWe analysed the variation of key functional traits (plant height, leaf area, leaf dry weight, specific leaf area and leaf number) of juvenile plants from the realised soil seed bank in relation to elevation (from 0 to 800 m a.s.l.), forest type (thinned and unthinned forest) and distance to the forest edge. We translocated soil samples from the forest core to the edge (and vice versa) and from high‐ to low‐elevation forests to test the effects of edge and warming respectively.ResultsTaller communities developed at the forest edge due to higher light availability and warmer temperatures. The translocation from the core to the edge did not significantly modify mean trait values. Instead, the shadier and cooler microclimate of the forest core reduced the mean leaf area, mean dry weight, height and leaf number in the communities realised from the edge soil. The translocation from high‐ to lowland forests led to increased values for all traits (except specific leaf area). Edge vs core trait variation was more driven by intraspecific variability, whereas the translocation from high‐ to low‐elevation forests caused trait changes mostly due to species turnover.ConclusionsGlobal warming might result in a functional shift of the understorey due to both an early filtering effect on the seedlings from soil seed banks and their adaptive trait adjustments to temperature increase. Furthermore, our study underpins the importance of edge vs core microclimate in driving the functional composition of the realised soil seed bank.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology

Reference86 articles.

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