Journal article

Subalpine plants show short-term positive growth responses to experimental warming and fire

FC Jarrad, CH Wahren, RJ Williams, MA Burgman

Australian Journal of Botany | Published : 2009

Abstract

Climate warming has the potential to directly affect plant growth rates by accelerating plant processes, and through intermediate affects associated with increased length of the growing season and changes to soil processes. Alpine and subalpine ecosystems may be particularly vulnerable to climate warming because species are adapted to a cold environment and have limited upslope refugia in Australia. In the present study, the vegetative growth of seven subalpine open-heath species was examined in response to 3 years of warming and a wildfire. The warming experiment was established in late 2003 on the Bogong High Plains, Australia, using the protocols of the International Tundra Experiment (IT..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was funded through an Australian Research Council Linkage Grant (LP0348897), the Department of Sustainability and Environment, Parks Victoria, CSIRO, ESLink Services Pty Ltd, and Mt Hotham Resort Management. We would like to thank Carolyn Blomley, Cherie Campbell, Deborah Cargill, Katherine Giljohann, Danielle Ryan, Paul Smart, Clare Warren and Emma Warren for their assistance in collecting field data. We would also like to thank Warwick Papst for his role in facilitating the ITEX project, Dr Sama Low Choy for statistical advice, and reviewers for comments on this manuscript.