Non-equilibrium in Alpine Plant Assemblages: Shifts in Europe’s Summit Floras

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Abstract

Climate warming has been more pronounced in Arctic and alpine areas, and changes in the mountain flora can be expected as the temperature envelope moves upslope. On the one hand, alpine habitats will shrink due to upward migration of species from lower areas, such as trees and tall plants. On the other hand, extinctions of summit plants may be slowed down considerably by the high diversity of microhabitats, the longevity of alpine plants and positive plant–plant interactions in extreme environments. This review chapter attempts to document and monitor vegetation changes on mountain summits. Vegetation surveys that repeat century-old historical vegetation records show considerable upward migration and subsequent increases in species on summits. This trend apparently has accelerated in recent decades. Detailed monitoring of the last decade in European mountain ranges, however, shows that this vegetation change may be at the cost of rare endemic species and alpine specialists in drier Mediterranean regions. This chapter furthermore reviews other factors than temperature influencing alpine vegetation, namely precipitation and snow, nutrients, atmospheric CO2 concentrations and land use. A subsequent question is how threatened mountain flora is by the ongoing environmental changes. Finally, this chapter discusses options for conservation and land use in high-alpine areas.

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Rixen, C., & Wipf, S. (2017). Non-equilibrium in Alpine Plant Assemblages: Shifts in Europe’s Summit Floras. In Advances in Global Change Research (Vol. 62, pp. 285–303). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55982-7_12

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