Little is known about the impact of changing temperature regimes on composition and diversity of cryptogam communities in the Arctic and Subarctic, despite the well-known importance of lichens and bryophytes to the functioning and climate feedbacks of northern ecosystems. We investigated changes in diversity and abundance of lichens and bryophytes within long-term (9-16 years) warming experiments and along natural climatic gradients, ranging from Swedish subarctic birch forest and subarctic/subalpine tundra to Alaskan arctic tussock tundra. In both Sweden and Alaska, lichen diversity responded negatively to experimental warming (with the exception of a birch forest) and to higher temperatures along climatic gradients. Bryophytes were less sensitive to experimental warming than lichens, but depending on the length of the gradient, bryophyte diversity decreased both with increasing temperatures and at extremely low temperatures. Among bryophytes, Sphagnum mosses were particularly resistant to experimental warming in terms of both abundance and diversity. Temperature, on both continents, was the main driver of species composition within experiments and along gradients, with the exception of the Swedish subarctic birch forest where amount of litter constituted the best explanatory variable. In a warming experiment in moist acidic tussock tundra in Alaska, temperature together with soil ammonium availability were the most important factors influencing species composition. Overall, dwarf shrub abundance (deciduous and evergreen) was positively related to warming but so were the bryophytes Sphagnum girgensohnii, Hylocomium splendens and Pleurozium schreberi; the majority of other cryptogams showed a negative relationship to warming. This unique combination of intercontinental comparison, natural gradient studies and experimental studies shows that cryptogam diversity and abundance, especially within lichens, is likely to decrease under arctic climate warming. Given the many ecosystem processes affected by cryptogams in high latitudes (e.g. carbon sequestration, N 2 -fixation, trophic interactions), these changes will have important feedback consequences for ecosystem functions and climate.
Summary 1.Changing temperature regimes and precipitation patterns in the Subarctic will impact on vegetation composition and diversity including those of bryophyte and lichen communities, which are major drivers of high-latitude carbon and nutrient cycling and hydrology. 2. We investigated the relative importance of such impacts at different temporal, spatial and plant functional scales in subarctic Sphagnum fuscum -dominated peatlands, comprising both an in situ warming experiment and natural climatic and topographic gradients in northern Sweden and Norway. We applied multivariate analyses to investigate the relationships among cryptogam and vascular plant species composition and abiotic (temperature, moisture) and biotic ( Sphagnum growth) regimes at various scales. 3. At the short-term temporal scale (4-year warming experiment), increased temperature yielded no clear effect on cryptogam or vascular plant species composition. Spatially, direct effects of temperature were decisive for overall species composition across regions (macro-scale) rather than within one region (meso-scale). Moisture and Sphagnum growth were drivers of species composition at all spatial scales, and Sphagnum growth itself depended on its position on the microtopographic gradient and on temperature. 4. Grouping of bryophytes and lichens at increasing scales of functional aggregation from species, growth form to the major higher taxon level ( Sphagnum , other mosses, liverworts, lichens) revealed mostly increasing correlation with climate regimes and Sphagnum growth. Excluding liverworts from the analysis tended to reduce the correlation. 5. Abundances of lichens, liverworts, non-Sphagnum mosses and (to a lesser degree) vascular plants were negatively related to Sphagnum abundance. Few cryptogam and vascular plant species showed a positive relationship with Sphagnum abundance. Correspondingly, cryptogam species richness and Shannon Index on peatlands strongly declined as Sphagnum abundance increased, while indices for vascular plants showed no significant relationship. 6. Synthesis . Scale, be it spatial or functional, strongly determined which environmental drivers showed the clearest relationships with vegetation composition and diversity. Our findings will help to optimize predictions about long-term effects of climate on peatland vegetation composition, and subsequently its feedbacks to carbon and water cycles, at the regional scale.
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Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) genotypes varying in intrinsic firmness were examined to determine the quantitative relationships between polygalacturonase (EC 3.2.1.15) activity, firmness and other ripening parameters including rate (days from mature‐green to full red) and intensity (rate of ethylene production at climacteric peak) of ripening. Texture, respiration and ethylene production were monitored in the immature‐green through the red (ripe) stages of development. Polygalacturonase activity was measured by direct assay of salt‐extractable wall protein or by monitoring the release of pectins from isolated, enzymically active wall. In all fruit, polygalacturonase activity was highly correlated with pericarp softening, but only moderately correlated with softening of whole fruit (r = 0.920 and 0.757, respectively). Polygalacturonase activity was positively correlated with cell‐wall autolytic activity in pink (r = 0.969) and red (r = 0.900) fruit. Firmer genotypes exhibited lower rates of respiration and ethylene production during ripening. Polygalacturonase activity in isolates prepared from fruit at the climacteric peak was positively correlated with ethylene production and respiration, and negatively correlated with days to ripening (r = 0.929, 0.805, and ‐0.791, respectively). The data demonstrate the importance of selecting the appropriate method of firmness determination and are consistent with the hypothesis that pectin fragments released by polygalacturonase contribute to the production of autocatalytic (system II) ethylene.
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