Impacts of climate change drivers on C4 grassland productivity: scaling driver effects through the plant community
Published 2014 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Impacts of climate change drivers on C4 grassland productivity: scaling driver effects through the plant community
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 65, Issue 13, Pages 3415-3424
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Online
2014-02-06
DOI
10.1093/jxb/eru009
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Ecosystem resilience despite large-scale altered hydroclimatic conditions
- (2013) Guillermo E. Ponce-Campos et al. NATURE
- Invasive forb benefits from water savings by native plants and carbon fertilization under elevated CO2and warming
- (2013) Dana M. Blumenthal et al. NEW PHYTOLOGIST
- Climate Change and North American Rangelands: Trends, Projections, and Implications
- (2013) H. Wayne Polley et al. Rangeland Ecology & Management
- Feedback from plant species change amplifies CO2enhancement of grassland productivity
- (2012) H. Wayne Polley et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Fire and fire-adapted vegetation promoted C4 expansion in the late Miocene
- (2012) Simon Scheiter et al. NEW PHYTOLOGIST
- Evolution of C4 plants: a new hypothesis for an interaction of CO2 and water relations mediated by plant hydraulics
- (2012) C. P. Osborne et al. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- Simple plant traits explain functional group diversity decline in novel grassland communities of Texas
- (2012) Pedram P. Daneshgar et al. PLANT ECOLOGY
- Biogeochemical and ecological feedbacks in grassland responses to warming
- (2012) Zhuoting Wu et al. Nature Climate Change
- Soil-mediated effects of subambient to increased carbon dioxide on grassland productivity
- (2012) Philip A. Fay et al. Nature Climate Change
- CO2-caused change in plant species composition rivals the shift in vegetation between mid-grass and tallgrass prairies
- (2011) H. Wayne Polley et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- A New Homogenized Climate Division Precipitation Dataset for Analysis of Climate Variability and Climate Change
- (2011) D. Brent McRoberts et al. Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
- Biodiversity, phenology and temporal niche differences between native- and novel exotic-dominated grasslands
- (2011) Brian J. Wilsey et al. PERSPECTIVES IN PLANT ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS
- Nitrogen regulation of the climate–carbon feedback: evidence from a long-term global change experiment
- (2010) Shuli Niu et al. ECOLOGY
- Ecosystem response to elevated CO2 levels limited by nitrogen-induced plant species shift
- (2010) J. Adam Langley et al. NATURE
- CO2 enrichment increases element concentrations in grass mixtures by changing species abundances
- (2010) H. Wayne Polley et al. PLANT ECOLOGY
- A framework for assessing ecosystem dynamics in response to chronic resource alterations induced by global change
- (2009) Melinda D. Smith et al. ECOLOGY
- Biodiversity maintenance mechanisms differ between native and novel exotic-dominated communities
- (2009) Brian J. Wilsey et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Primary Productivity and Water Balance of Grassland Vegetation on Three Soils in a Continuous CO2 Gradient: Initial Results from the Lysimeter CO2 Gradient Experiment
- (2009) Philip A. Fay et al. ECOSYSTEMS
- Climate controls on C3vs. C4productivity in North American grasslands from carbon isotope composition of soil organic matter
- (2008) JOSEPH C. von FISCHER et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Scaling environmental change through the community-level: a trait-based response-and-effect framework for plants
- (2008) KATHARINE N. SUDING et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Atmospheric Warming and the Amplification of Precipitation Extremes
- (2008) Richard P. Allan et al. SCIENCE
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationCreate your own webinar
Interested in hosting your own webinar? Check the schedule and propose your idea to the Peeref Content Team.
Create Now