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  4. Ericoid shrub encroachment shifts aboveground-belowground linkages in three peatlands across Europe and Western Siberia
 
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research article

Ericoid shrub encroachment shifts aboveground-belowground linkages in three peatlands across Europe and Western Siberia

Buttler, Alexandre  
•
Bragazza, Luca
•
Laggoun-Defarge, Fatima
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August 14, 2023
Global Change Biology

In northern peatlands, reduction of Sphagnum dominance in favour of vascular vegetation is likely to influence biogeochemical processes. Such vegetation changes occur as the water table lowers and temperatures rise. To test which of these factors has a significant influence on peatland vegetation, we conducted a 3-year manipulative field experiment in Linje mire (northern Poland). We manipulated the peatland water table level (wet, intermediate and dry; on average the depth of the water table was 17.4, 21.2 and 25.3 cm respectively), and we used open-top chambers (OTCs) to create warmer conditions (on average increase of 1.2? in OTC plots compared to control plots). Peat drying through water table lowering at this local scale had a larger effect than OTC warming treatment per see on Sphagnum mosses and vascular plants. In particular, ericoid shrubs increased with a lower water table level, while Sphagnum decreased. Microclimatic measurements at the plot scale indicated that both water-level and temperature, represented by heating degree days (HDDs), can have significant effects on the vegetation. In a large-scale complementary vegetation gradient survey replicated in three peatlands positioned along a transitional oceanic-continental and temperate-boreal (subarctic) gradient (France-Poland-Western Siberia), an increase in ericoid shrubs was marked by an increase in phenols in peat pore water, resulting from higher phenol concentrations in vascular plant biomass. Our results suggest a shift in functioning from a mineral-N-driven to a fungi-mediated organic-N nutrient acquisition with shrub encroachment. Both ericoid shrub encroachment and higher mean annual temperature in the three sites triggered greater vascular plant biomass and consequently the dominance of decomposers (especially fungi), which led to a feeding community dominated by nematodes. This contributed to lower enzymatic multifunctionality. Our findings illustrate mechanisms by which plants influence ecosystem responses to climate change, through their effect on microbial trophic interactions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/gcb.16904
Web of Science ID

WOS:001048570900001

Author(s)
Buttler, Alexandre  
•
Bragazza, Luca
•
Laggoun-Defarge, Fatima
•
Gogo, Sebastien
•
Toussaint, Marie-Laure
•
Lamentowicz, Mariusz
•
Chojnicki, Bogdan H. H.
•
Slowinski, Michal
•
Slowinska, Sandra
•
Zielinska, Malgorzata
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Date Issued

2023-08-14

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Global Change Biology
Subjects

Biodiversity Conservation

•

Ecology

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Environmental Sciences

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Biodiversity & Conservation

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

dissolved organic c

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enzyme

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microorganism

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open-top chamber warming

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phenolic compound

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sphagnum moss

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vascular plant

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water table

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soil microbial communities

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climate-change

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boreal peatland

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litter decomposition

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functional diversity

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mire ecosystems

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carbon loss

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plant

•

temperature

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drought

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PERL  
Available on Infoscience
August 28, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/200303
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