Late Quaternary climate legacies in contemporary plant functional composition

Benjamin Blonder*, Brian J. Enquist, Bente J. Graae, Jens Kattge, Brian S. Maitner, Naia Morueta-Holme, Alejandro Ordonez, Irena Šímová, Joy Singarayer, Jens Christian Svenning, Paul J. Valdes, Cyrille Violle

*Corresponding author for this work
    20 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The functional composition of plant communities is commonly thought to be determined by contemporary climate. However, if rates of climate-driven immigration and/or exclusion of species are slow, then contemporary functional composition may be explained by paleoclimate as well as by contemporary climate. We tested this idea by coupling contemporary maps of plant functional trait composition across North and South America to paleoclimate means and temporal variation in temperature and precipitation from the Last Interglacial (120 ka) to the present. Paleoclimate predictors strongly improved prediction of contemporary functional composition compared to contemporary climate predictors, with a stronger influence of temperature in North America (especially during periods of ice melting) and of precipitation in South America (across all times). Thus, climate from tens of thousands of years ago influences contemporary functional composition via slow assemblage dynamics.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalGlobal Change Biology
    Volume24
    Issue number10
    Pages (from-to)4827-4840
    Number of pages14
    ISSN1354-1013
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2018

    Keywords

    • climate change
    • disequilibrium
    • exclusion
    • functional diversity
    • functional trait
    • Holocene
    • immigration
    • lag
    • legacy
    • Pleistocene

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