Moss functional trait ecology: Trends, gaps, and biases in the current literature

Author:

Coe Kirsten1ORCID,Carter Benjamin2ORCID,Slate Mandy34ORCID,Stanton Daniel5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Middlebury VT 05753 USA

2. Department of Biological Sciences San Jose State University San Jose CA 95192 USA

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Colorado Boulder CO 80309 USA

4. Present address: Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology The Ohio State University Columbus OH 43210 USA

5. Department of Ecology Evolution and Behavior University of Minnesota Saint Paul MN 55108 USA

Abstract

AbstractFunctional traits are critical tools in plant ecology for capturing organism–environment interactions based on trade‐offs and making links between organismal and ecosystem processes. While broad frameworks for functional traits have been developed for vascular plants, we lack the same for bryophytes, despite an escalation in the number of studies on bryophyte functional trait in the last 45 years and an increased recognition of the ecological roles bryophytes play across ecosystems. In this review, we compiled data from 282 published articles (10,005 records) that focused on functional traits measured in mosses and sought to examine trends in types of traits measured, capture taxonomic and geographic breadth of trait coverage, reveal biases in coverage in the current literature, and develop a bryophyte‐function index (BFI) to describe the completeness of current trait coverage and identify global gaps to focus research efforts. The most commonly measured response traits (those related to growth/reproduction in individual organisms) and effect traits (those that directly affect community/ecosystem scale processes) fell into the categories of morphology (e.g., leaf area, shoot height) and nutrient storage/cycling, and our BFI revealed that these data were most commonly collected from temperate and boreal regions of Europe, North America, and East Asia. However, fewer than 10% of known moss species have available functional trait information. Our synthesis revealed a need for research on traits related to ontogeny, sex, and intraspecific plasticity and on co‐measurement of traits related to water relations and bryophyte‐mediated soil processes.

Publisher

Wiley

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