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Plant height as an indicator for alpine carbon sequestration and ecosystem response to warming.

Quan QuanNianpeng HeRuiyang ZhangJinsong WangYiqi LuoFangfang MaJunxiao PanRuomeng WangCongcong LiuJiahui ZhangYiheng WangBing SongZhaolei LiQingping ZhouGui-Rui YuShuli Niu
Published in: Nature plants (2024)
Growing evidence indicates that plant community structure and traits have changed under climate warming, especially in cold or high-elevation regions. However, the impact of these warming-induced changes on ecosystem carbon sequestration remains unclear. Using a warming experiment on the high-elevation Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, we found that warming not only increased plant species height but also altered species composition, collectively resulting in a taller plant community associated with increased net ecosystem productivity (NEP). Along a 1,500 km transect on the Plateau, taller plant community promoted NEP and soil carbon through associated chlorophyll content and other photosynthetic traits at the community level. Overall, plant community height as a dominant trait is associated with species composition and regulates ecosystem C sequestration in the high-elevation biome. This trait-based association provides new insights into predicting the direction, magnitude and sensitivity of ecosystem C fluxes in response to climate warming.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • mental health
  • human health
  • healthcare
  • body mass index
  • genome wide
  • plant growth
  • gene expression
  • stress induced