Hydrological conditions lead to asynchronised responses of alpine plant
communities to temperature changes at the watershed scale
Abstract
Temperature and water are critical drivers of alpine plant communities.
However, uncertainties persist regarding their combined effects,
particular in alpine watersheds experiencing rapid changes in
temperature and hydrological process over the past decades. In this
study, we investigated how hydrological conditions mediate alpine plant
communities’ response to temperature changes at the watershed scale. Our
study showed that in water-deficient grasslands, an unimodal response of
species richness (p < 0.05) and a linear decrease in coverage
(p < 0.001), but non-significant changes in productivity (p
> 0.05) were revealed with increasing temperature. These
asynchronized changes in coverage and productivity are ascribed to plant
adaptation to water stress. Plant communities shifted from low and dense
cushions to taller and sparser vegetations, while dominant species
changed from small and shallow-rooted species (Kobresia pygmaea) to
large and deep-rooted (Potentilla bifurca) ones. In contrast, riverine
wetlands showed no significant changes (p > 0.05) in
community structure or productivity, likely due to their high
hydrological connectivity that promoted propagule dispersal and soil
environment homogenisation. Moreover, temperature and its mediated soil
properties strongly influenced plant community structure in grasslands
and transitional zones (R2 = 0.69 and 0.73 in Structural Equation
Modeling, respectively) but not in wetlands (R2 = 0.25 in Structural
Equation Modeling). This also indicates the prevailing of homogenization
of habitat and species pool via strong hydrological dispersal in wetland
community assembly. Overall, this study highlights that complex
temperature-water interactions shape alpine plant communities at the
watershed scale, which is unlikely to be understood from site-scale
warming experiments focusing on a single vegetation. Future studies in
these mountainous areas should consider the spatial heterogeneity
induced by their complex vegetation types and hydrological conditions,
while understanding the effects of intensifying stochastic processes on
alpine ecosystems experiencing drastic hydrological changes.