Carbon dioxide enrichment alters plant community structure and accelerates shrub growth in the shortgrass steppe
- *Rangeland Resources Research Unit and
- §Northern Plains Area, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO 80526;
- ‡Department of Forest, Rangeland, and Watershed Stewardship and Natural Resources Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523; and
- ¶Soil Plant Nutrient Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO 80526
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Edited by Harold A. Mooney, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, and approved July 25, 2007 (received for review April 13, 2007)
Abstract
A hypothesis has been advanced that the incursion of woody plants into world grasslands over the past two centuries has been driven in part by increasing carbon dioxide concentration, [CO2], in Earth's atmosphere. Unlike the warm season forage grasses they are displacing, woody plants have a photosynthetic metabolism and carbon allocation patterns that are responsive to CO2, and many have tap roots that are more effective than grasses for reaching deep soil water stores that can be enhanced under elevated CO2. However, this commonly cited hypothesis has little direct support from manipulative experimentation and competes with more traditional theories of shrub encroachment involving climate change, management, and fire. Here, we show that, although doubling [CO2] over the Colorado shortgrass steppe had little impact on plant species diversity, it resulted in an increasingly dissimilar plant community over the 5-year experiment compared with plots maintained at present-day [CO2]. Growth at the doubled [CO2] resulted in an ≈40-fold increase in aboveground biomass and a 20-fold increase in plant cover of Artemisia frigida Willd, a common subshrub of some North American and Asian grasslands. This CO2-induced enhancement of plant growth, among the highest yet reported, provides evidence from a native grassland suggesting that rising atmospheric [CO2] may be contributing to the shrubland expansions of the past 200 years. Encroachment of shrubs into grasslands is an important problem facing rangeland managers and ranchers; this process replaces grasses, the preferred forage of domestic livestock, with species that are unsuitable for domestic livestock grazing.
Footnotes
- †To whom correspondence may be addressed at: USDA-ARS, RRRU, CRL, 1701 Centre Avenue, Fort Collins, CO 80526. E-mail: jack.morgan{at}ars.usda.gov
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Author contributions: J.A.M., D.G.M., and A.R.M. designed research; J.A.M., D.G.M., D.R.L., and A.R.M. performed research; J.A.M., D.G.M., D.R.L., and M.W. analyzed data; and J.A.M. wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
- Abbreviation:
- OTC,
- open-top chamber.
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Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
- © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





