The resilience and functional role of moss in boreal and arctic ecosystems
Abstract
Mosses in northern ecosystems are ubiquitous components of plant communities, and strongly influence nutrient, carbon and water cycling. We use literature review, synthesis and model simulations to explore the role of mosses in ecological stability and resilience. Moss community responses to disturbance showed all possible responses (increases, decreases, no change) within most disturbance categories. Simulations from two process-based models suggest that northern ecosystems would need to experience extreme perturbation before mosses were eliminated. But simulations with two other models suggest that loss of moss will reduce soil carbon accumulation primarily by influencing decomposition rates and soil nitrogen availability. It seems clear that mosses need to be incorporated into models as one or more plant functional types, but more empirical work is needed to determine how to best aggregate species. We highlight several issues that have not been adequately explored in moss communities, such as functional redundancy and singularity, relationships between response and effect traits, and parameter vs conceptual uncertainty in models. Mosses play an important role in several ecosystem processes that play out over centuries – permafrost formation and thaw, peat accumulation, development of microtopography – and there is a need for studies that increase our understanding of slow, long-term dynamical processes.
Department
Earth Sciences, Earth Systems Research Center
Publication Date
8-2012
Journal Title
New Phytologist
Publisher
Wiley
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1111/j.1469-8137.2012.04254.x
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Turetsky, M. R., Bond-Lamberty, B., Euskirchen, E., Talbot, J., Frolking, S., McGuire, A. D. and Tuittila, E.-S. (2012), The resilience and functional role of moss in boreal and arctic ecosystems. New Phytologist, 196: 49–67. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.2012.04254.x
Rights
© 2012 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2012 New Phytologist Trust