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  1. The Q10 coefficient is the ratio of reaction rates at two temperatures 10°C apart, and has been widely applied to quantify the temperature sensitivity of organic matter decomposition. However, biogeochemists and ecologists have long recognized that a constant Q10 coefficient does not describe the temperature sensitivity of organic matter decomposition accurately. To examine the consequences of the constant Q10 assumption, we built a biogeochemical reaction model to simulate anaerobic organic matter decomposition in peatlands in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA, and compared the simulation results to the predictions with Q10 coefficients. By accounting for the reactions of extracellular enzymes, mesophilic fermenting and methanogenic microbes, and their temperature responses, the biogeochemical reaction model reproduces the observations of previous laboratory incubation experiments, including the temporal variations in the concentrations of dissolved organic carbon, acetate, dihydrogen, carbon dioxide, and methane, and confirms that fermentation limits the progress of anaerobic organic matter decomposition. The modeling results illustrate the oversimplification inherent in the constant Q10 assumption and how the assumption undermines the kinetic prediction of anaerobic organic matter decomposition. In particular, the model predicts that between 5°C and 30°C, the decomposition rate increases almost linearly with increasing temperature, which stands in sharp contrast to the exponential relationship given by the Q10 coefficient. As a result, the constant Q10 approach tends to underestimate the rates of organic matter decomposition within the temperature ranges where Q10 values are determined, and overestimate the rates outside the temperature ranges. The results also show how biogeochemical reaction modeling, combined with laboratory experiments, can help uncover the temperature sensitivity of organic matter decomposition arising from underlying catalytic mechanisms. 
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  2. Abstract

    Does drought stress in temperate grasslands alter the relationship between plant structure and function? Here we report data from an experiment focusing on growth form and species traits that affect the critical functions of water‐ and nutrient‐use efficiency in prairie and pasture plant communities. A total of 139 individuals of 12 species (11 genera and four families) were sampled in replicated plots maintained for three years across a 520 km latitudinal gradient in the Pacific Northwest, USA. Rain exclusion did not alter the interspecific relationship between foliar traits and stoichiometry or intrinsic water‐use efficiency (iWUE). Rain exclusion reduced iWUE in grasses, an effect was primarily species‐specific, although leaf morphology, life history strategy, and phylogenetic distance predicted iWUE for all 12 species when analyzed together. Variation in specific leaf area explained most of the variation in iWUE between different functional groups, with annual forbs and annual grasses at opposite ends of the resource‐use spectrum. Our findings are consistent with expected trait‐driven tradeoffs between productivity and resource‐use efficiency, and provide insight into strategies for the sustainable use and conservation of temperate grasslands.

     
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  3. Abstract

    Wetlands cover a small portion of the world, but have disproportionate influence on global carbon (C) sequestration, carbon dioxide and methane emissions, and aquatic C fluxes. However, the underlying biogeochemical processes that affect wetland C pools and fluxes are complex and dynamic, making measurements of wetland C challenging. Over decades of research, many observational, experimental, and analytical approaches have been developed to understand and quantify pools and fluxes of wetland C. Sampling approaches range in their representation of wetland C from short to long timeframes and local to landscape spatial scales. This review summarizes common and cutting-edge methodological approaches for quantifying wetland C pools and fluxes. We firstdefineeach of the major C pools and fluxes and providerationalefor their importance to wetland C dynamics. For each approach, we clarifywhatcomponent of wetland C is measured and its spatial and temporal representativeness and constraints. We describe practical considerations for each approach, such aswhereandwhenan approach is typically used,whocan conduct the measurements (expertise, training requirements), andhowapproaches are conducted, including considerations on equipment complexity and costs. Finally, we reviewkey covariatesandancillary measurementsthat enhance the interpretation of findings and facilitate model development. The protocols that we describe to measure soil, water, vegetation, and gases are also relevant for related disciplines such as ecology. Improved quality and consistency of data collection and reporting across studies will help reduce global uncertainties and develop management strategies to use wetlands as nature-based climate solutions.

     
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  5. Abstract

    TheQ10coefficient is the ratio of reaction rates at two temperatures 10°C apart, and has been widely applied to quantify the temperature sensitivity of organic matter decomposition. However, biogeochemists and ecologists have long recognized that a constantQ10coefficient does not describe the temperature sensitivity of organic matter decomposition accurately. To examine the consequences of the constantQ10assumption, we built a biogeochemical reaction model to simulate anaerobic organic matter decomposition in peatlands in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA, and compared the simulation results to the predictions withQ10coefficients. By accounting for the reactions of extracellular enzymes, mesophilic fermenting and methanogenic microbes, and their temperature responses, the biogeochemical reaction model reproduces the observations of previous laboratory incubation experiments, including the temporal variations in the concentrations of dissolved organic carbon, acetate, dihydrogen, carbon dioxide, and methane, and confirms that fermentation limits the progress of anaerobic organic matter decomposition. The modeling results illustrate the oversimplification inherent in the constantQ10assumption and how the assumption undermines the kinetic prediction of anaerobic organic matter decomposition. In particular, the model predicts that between 5°C and 30°C, the decomposition rate increases almost linearly with increasing temperature, which stands in sharp contrast to the exponential relationship given by theQ10coefficient. As a result, the constantQ10approach tends to underestimate the rates of organic matter decomposition within the temperature ranges whereQ10values are determined, and overestimate the rates outside the temperature ranges. The results also show how biogeochemical reaction modeling, combined with laboratory experiments, can help uncover the temperature sensitivity of organic matter decomposition arising from underlying catalytic mechanisms.

     
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  6. Ecological restoration often relies on disturbance as a tool for establishing target plant communities, but disturbance can be a double‐edged sword, at times initiating invasion and unintended outcomes. Here we test how fire disturbance, designed to enhance restoration seeding success, combines with climate and initial vegetation conditions to shift perennial versus annual grass dominance and overall community diversity in Pacific Northwest grasslands. We seeded both native and introduced perennial grasses and native forbs in paired, replicated burned‐unburned plots in three sites along a latitudinal climate gradient from southern Oregon to central‐western Washington. Past restoration and climate manipulations at each site had increased the variation of starting conditions between plots. Burning promoted the expansion of extant forbs and perennial grasses across all sites. Burning also enhanced the seeding success of native perennial grass and native forbs at the northern and central site, and the success of introduced perennial grasses across all three sites. Annual grass dominance was driven more by latitude than burning, with annuals maintaining their dominance in the south and perennials in the north. At the same time, unrestored grasslands surrounding all sites remained dominated by perennial grasses, suggesting that initial plot clearing may have allowed for annual grass invasion in the southern site. When paired with disturbance, further warming may increase the risk of annual grass dominance, a potentially persistent state.

     
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  7. Abstract Aim

    How climate change will alter plant functional group composition is a critical question given the well‐recognized effects of plant functional groups on ecosystem services. While climate can have direct effects on different functional groups, indirect effects mediated through changes in biotic interactions have the potential to amplify or counteract direct climatic effects. As a result, identifying the underlying causes for climate effects on plant communities is important to conservation and restoration initiatives.

    Location

    Western Pacific Northwest (Oregon and Washington), USA.

    Methods

    Utilizing a 3‐year experiment in three prairie sites across a 520‐km latitudinal climate gradient, we manipulated temperature and precipitation and recorded plant cover at the peak of each growing season. We used structural equation models to examine how abiotic drivers (i.e. temperature, moisture and soil nitrogen) controlled functional group cover, and how these groups in turn determined overall plant diversity.

    Results

    Warming increased the cover of introduced annual species, causing subsequent declines in other functional groups and diversity. While we found direct effects of temperature and moisture on extant vegetation (i.e. native annuals, native perennials and introduced perennials), these effects were typically amplified by introduced annuals. Competition for moisture and light or space, rather than nitrogen, were critical mechanisms of community change in this seasonally water‐limited Mediterranean‐climate system. Diversity declines were driven by reductions in native annual cover and increasing dominance by introduced annuals.

    Main conclusions

    A shift towards increasing introduced annual dominance in this system may be akin to that previously experienced in California grasslands, resulting in the “Californication” of Pacific Northwest prairies. Such a phenomenon may challenge local land managers in their efforts to maintain species‐rich and functionally diverse prairie ecosystems in the future.

     
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  8. Abstract

    With ongoing climate change, populations are expected to exhibit shifts in demographic performance that will alter where a species can persist. This presents unique challenges for managing plant populations and may require ongoing interventions, including in situ management or introduction into new locations. However, few studies have examined how climate change may affect plant demographic performance for a suite of species, or how effective management actions could be in mitigating climate change effects. Over the course of two experiments spanning 6 yr and four sites across a latitudinal gradient in the Pacific Northwest, United States, we manipulated temperature, precipitation, and disturbance intensity, and quantified effects on the demography of eight native annual prairie species. Each year we planted seeds and monitored germination, survival, and reproduction. We found that disturbance strongly influenced demographic performance and that seven of the eight species had increasingly poor performance with warmer conditions. Across species and sites, we observed 11% recruitment (the proportion of seeds planted that survived to reproduction) following high disturbance, but just 3.9% and 2.3% under intermediate and low disturbance, respectively. Moreover, mean seed production following high disturbance was often more than tenfold greater than under intermediate and low disturbance. Importantly, most species exhibited precipitous declines in their population growth rates (λ) under warmer‐than‐ambient experimental conditions and may require more frequent disturbance intervention to sustain populations.Aristida oligantha, a C4 grass, was the only species to have λ increase with warmer conditions. These results suggest that rising temperatures may cause many native annual plant species to decline, highlighting the urgency for adaptive management practices that facilitate their restoration or introduction to newly suitable locations. Frequent and intense disturbances are critical to reduce competitors and promote native annuals’ persistence, but even such efforts may prove futile under future climate regimes.

     
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