AI Article Synopsis

  • A global trend of woody thickening has been linked to increasing atmospheric CO levels, but few field experiments have tested this claim.
  • The study used a Free Air CO Enrichment experiment to assess how elevated CO levels affect woody plant recruitment, seedling growth, and resprouting in a eucalypt-dominated grassy woodland.
  • Findings revealed that while juvenile recruitment occurred, elevated CO did not enhance recruitment rates, seedling biomass, or resprouting, suggesting that atmospheric CO increases alone may not drive woody thickening in these ecosystems.

Article Abstract

A trend of increasing woody plant density, or woody thickening, has been observed across grassland and woodland ecosystems globally. It has been proposed that increasing atmospheric [CO] is a major driver of broad scale woody thickening, though few field-based experiments have tested this hypothesis. Our study utilises a Free Air CO Enrichment experiment to examine the effect of elevated [CO] (eCO) on three mechanisms that can cause woody thickening, namely (i) woody plant recruitment, (ii) seedling growth, and (iii) post-disturbance resprouting. The study took place in a eucalypt-dominated temperate grassy woodland. Annual assessments show that juvenile woody plant recruitment occurred over the first 3 years of CO fumigation, though eCO did not affect rates of recruitment. Manipulative experiments were established to examine the effect of eCO on above-ground seedling growth using transplanted Eucalyptus tereticornis (Myrtaceae) and Hakea sericea (Proteaceae) seedlings. There was no positive effect of eCO on biomass of either species following 12 months of exposure to treatments. Lignotubers (i.e., resprouting organs) of harvested E. tereticornis seedlings that were retained in situ for an additional year were used to examine resprouting response. The likelihood of resprouting and biomass of resprouts increased with lignotuber volume, which was not itself affected by eCO. The presence of herbaceous competitors and defoliation by invertebrates and pathogens were found to greatly reduce growth and/or resprouting response of seedlings. Our findings do not support the hypothesis that future increases in atmospheric [CO] will, by itself, promote woody plant recruitment in eucalypt-dominated temperate grassy woodlands.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-018-4143-1DOI Listing

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