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Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding ecosystem retrogression

TLDR
A review of the literature on ecosystem retrogression can be found in this paper, where the authors synthesize the findings from studies of long-term chronosequences that include retrogressive stages for systems spanning the boreal, temperate, and subtropical zones.
Abstract
Over time scales of thousands to millions of years, and in the absence of rejuvenating disturbances that initiate primary or early secondary succession, ecosystem properties such as net primary productivity, decomposition, and rates of nutrient cycling undergo substantial declines termed ecosystem retrogression. Retrogression results from the depletion or reduction in the availability of nutrients, and can only be reversed through rejuvenating disturbance that resets the system; this differs from age-related declines in forest productivity that are driven by shorter-term depression of nutrient availability and plant ecophysiological process rates that occur during succession. Here we review and synthesize the findings from studies of long-term chronosequences that include retrogressive stages for systems spanning the boreal, temperate, and subtropical zones. Ecosystem retrogression has been described by ecologists, biogeochemists, geologists, and pedologists, each of which has developed somewhat independent conceptual frameworks; our review seeks to unify this literature in order to better understand the causes and consequences of retrogression. Studies of retrogression have improved our knowledge of how long-term pedogenic changes drive shorter-term biological processes, as well as the consequences of these changes for ecosystem development. Our synthesis also reveals that similar patterns of retrogression (involving reduced soil fertility, predictable shifts in organismic traits, and ecological processes) occur in systems with vastly different climatic regimes, geologic substrates, and vegetation types, even though the timescales and mechanisms driving retrogression may vary greatly among sites. Studies on retrogression also provide evidence that in many regions, high biomass or "climax" forests are often transient, and do not persist indefinitely in the absence of rejuvenating disturbance. Finally, our review highlights that studies on retrogressive chronosequences in contrasting regions provide unparalleled opportunities for developing general principles about the long-term feedbacks between biological communities and pedogenic processes, and how these control ecosystem development.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The use of chronosequences in studies of ecological succession and soil development

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate when chronosequences may or may not be appropriate for studying community and ecosystem development, and they conclude that, when successional trajectories exceed the life span of investigators and the experimental and observational studies that they perform, temporal change can be successfully explored through the judicious use of chronosquences.
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Species distributions in response to individual soil nutrients and seasonal drought across a community of tropical trees

TL;DR: The finding that many species have pronounced associations with either high or low phosphorus reveals a previously unquantified role for this nutrient in limiting tropical tree distributions, which provides the data necessary for understanding distributional limits of tree species and predicting future changes in forest composition.
Journal ArticleDOI

A guide for using functional diversity indices to reveal changes in assembly processes along ecological gradients

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a reliable test for changes in assembly processes along stress gradients requires functional diversity indices measuring either functional richness or functional divergence, which provide good power to test for increasing niche complementarity with declining stress across a broad range of ecological contexts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Four opportunities for studies of ecological succession

TL;DR: It is suggested that succession is particularly suitable to address concerns about biodiversity loss, climate change, invasive species, and ecological restoration, and studies of succession can substantially improve the authors' understanding of other ecological phenomena.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contrasting changes in taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional diversity during a long‐term succession: insights into assembly processes

TL;DR: Functionally deterministic assembly suggests that it may be possible to predict future post-disturbance changes in biodiversity, and associated ecosystem attributes, on the basis of species’ functional traits but not phylogeny.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the composition of the present upper crust and deal with possible compositions for the total crust and the inferred composition of lower crust, and the question of the uniformity of crustal composition throughout geological time is discussed.
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The worldwide leaf economics spectrum

TL;DR: Reliable quantification of the leaf economics spectrum and its interaction with climate will prove valuable for modelling nutrient fluxes and vegetation boundaries under changing land-use and climate.
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Evidence for the existence of three primary strategies in plants and its relevance to ecological and evolutionary theory

TL;DR: A triangular model based upon the three strategies of evolution in plants may be reconciled with the theory of r- and K-selection, provides an insight into the processes of vegetation succession and dominance, and appears to be capable of extension to fungi and to animals.
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The unseen majority: Soil microbes as drivers of plant diversity and productivity in terrestrial ecosystems

TL;DR: Overall, this review shows that soil microbes must be considered as important drivers of plant diversity and productivity in terrestrial ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resource Availability and Plant Antiherbivore Defense

TL;DR: Resource availability in the environment is proposed as the major determinant of both the amount and type of plant defense, and theories on the evolution of plant defenses are compared with other theories.
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