Phenolic Responses of Mountain Crowberry (Empetrum nigrum ssp hermaphroditum) to Global Climate Change are Compound Specific and Depend on Grazing by Reindeer (Rangifer tarandus). Väisänen, M., Martz, F., Kaarlejärvi, E., Julkunen-Tiitto, R., & Stark, S. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 39(11-12):1390–1399, December, 2013. 00008
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Mountain crowberry (Empetrum nigrum ssp. hermaphroditum) is a keystone species in northern ecosystems and exerts important ecosystem-level effects through high concentrations of phenolic metabolites. It has not been investigated how crowberry phenolics will respond to global climate change. In the tundra, grazing by reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) affects vegetation and soil nutrient availability, but almost nothing is known about the interactions between grazing and global climate change on plant phenolics. We performed a factorial warming and fertilization experiment in a tundra ecosystem under light grazing and heavy grazing and analyzed individual foliar phenolics and crowberry abundance. Crowberry was more abundant under light grazing than heavy grazing. Although phenolic concentrations did not differ between grazing intensities, responses of crowberry abundance and phenolic concentrations to warming varied significantly depending on grazing intensity. Under light grazing, warming increased crowberry abundance and the concentration of stilbenes, but decreased e.g., the concentrations of flavonols, condensed tannins, and batatasin-III, resulting in no change in total phenolics. Under heavy grazing, warming did not affect crowberry abundance, and induced a weak but consistent decrease among the different phenolic compound groups, resulting in a net decrease in total phenolics. Our results show that the different phenolic compound groups may show varying or even opposing responses to warming in the tundra at different levels of grazing intensity. Even when plant phenolic concentrations do not directly respond to grazing, grazers may have a key control over plant responses to changes in the abiotic environment, reflecting multiple adaptive purposes of plant phenolics and complex interactions between the biotic and the abiotic factors.
@article{vaisanen_phenolic_2013,
	title = {Phenolic {Responses} of {Mountain} {Crowberry} ({Empetrum} nigrum ssp hermaphroditum) to {Global} {Climate} {Change} are {Compound} {Specific} and {Depend} on {Grazing} by {Reindeer} ({Rangifer} tarandus)},
	volume = {39},
	issn = {0098-0331},
	doi = {10.1007/s10886-013-0367-z},
	abstract = {Mountain crowberry (Empetrum nigrum ssp. hermaphroditum) is a keystone species in northern ecosystems and exerts important ecosystem-level effects through high concentrations of phenolic metabolites. It has not been investigated how crowberry phenolics will respond to global climate change. In the tundra, grazing by reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) affects vegetation and soil nutrient availability, but almost nothing is known about the interactions between grazing and global climate change on plant phenolics. We performed a factorial warming and fertilization experiment in a tundra ecosystem under light grazing and heavy grazing and analyzed individual foliar phenolics and crowberry abundance. Crowberry was more abundant under light grazing than heavy grazing. Although phenolic concentrations did not differ between grazing intensities, responses of crowberry abundance and phenolic concentrations to warming varied significantly depending on grazing intensity. Under light grazing, warming increased crowberry abundance and the concentration of stilbenes, but decreased e.g., the concentrations of flavonols, condensed tannins, and batatasin-III, resulting in no change in total phenolics. Under heavy grazing, warming did not affect crowberry abundance, and induced a weak but consistent decrease among the different phenolic compound groups, resulting in a net decrease in total phenolics. Our results show that the different phenolic compound groups may show varying or even opposing responses to warming in the tundra at different levels of grazing intensity. Even when plant phenolic concentrations do not directly respond to grazing, grazers may have a key control over plant responses to changes in the abiotic environment, reflecting multiple adaptive purposes of plant phenolics and complex interactions between the biotic and the abiotic factors.},
	language = {English},
	number = {11-12},
	journal = {Journal of Chemical Ecology},
	author = {Väisänen, Maria and Martz, Francoise and Kaarlejärvi, Elina and Julkunen-Tiitto, Riitta and Stark, Sari},
	month = dec,
	year = {2013},
	note = {00008},
	keywords = {\#nosource, Batatasin-III, Plants, Stilbenes, Warming, allocation, arctic tundra, carbon-nutrient balance, dwarf shrubs, fertilization, growth, herbivores, herbivory, tannins, tundra ecosystems, vegetation},
	pages = {1390--1399},
}

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