Peter D. Wragg
University of Minnesota
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Publication
Featured researches published by Peter D. Wragg.
Nature plants | 2015
Philip A. Fay; Suzanne M. Prober; W. Stanley Harpole; Johannes M. H. Knops; Jonathan D. Bakker; Elizabeth T. Borer; Eric M. Lind; Andrew S. MacDougall; Eric W. Seabloom; Peter D. Wragg; Peter B. Adler; Dana M. Blumenthal; Yvonne M. Buckley; Chengjin Chu; Elsa E. Cleland; Scott L. Collins; Kendi F. Davies; Guozhen Du; Xiaohui Feng; Jennifer Firn; Daniel S. Gruner; Nicole Hagenah; Yann Hautier; Robert W. Heckman; Virginia L. Jin; Kevin P. Kirkman; Julia A. Klein; Laura M. Ladwig; Qi Li; Rebecca L. McCulley
Terrestrial ecosystem productivity is widely accepted to be nutrient limited1. Although nitrogen (N) is deemed a key determinant of aboveground net primary production (ANPP)2,3, the prevalence of co-limitation by N and phosphorus (P) is increasingly recognized4–8. However, the extent to which terrestrial productivity is co-limited by nutrients other than N and P has remained unclear. Here, we report results from a standardized factorial nutrient addition experiment, in which we added N, P and potassium (K) combined with a selection of micronutrients (K+μ), alone or in concert, to 42 grassland sites spanning five continents, and monitored ANPP. Nutrient availability limited productivity at 31 of the 42 grassland sites. And pairwise combinations of N, P, and K+μ co-limited ANPP at 29 of the sites. Nitrogen limitation peaked in cool, high latitude sites. Our findings highlight the importance of less studied nutrients, such as K and micronutrients, for grassland productivity, and point to significant variations in the type and degree of nutrient limitation. We suggest that multiple-nutrient constraints must be considered when assessing the ecosystem-scale consequences of nutrient enrichment.
Ecology Letters | 2013
Eric M. Lind; Elizabeth T. Borer; Eric W. Seabloom; Peter B. Adler; Jonathan D. Bakker; Dana M. Blumenthal; Michael J. Crawley; Kendi F. Davies; Jennifer Firn; Daniel S. Gruner; W. Stanley Harpole; Yann Hautier; Helmut Hillebrand; Johannes M. H. Knops; Brett A. Melbourne; Brent Mortensen; Anita C. Risch; Martin Schuetz; Carly J. Stevens; Peter D. Wragg
Plant growth can be limited by resource acquisition and defence against consumers, leading to contrasting trade-off possibilities. The competition-defence hypothesis posits a trade-off between competitive ability and defence against enemies (e.g. herbivores and pathogens). The growth-defence hypothesis suggests that strong competitors for nutrients are also defended against enemies, at a cost to growth rate. We tested these hypotheses using observations of 706 plant populations of over 500 species before and following identical fertilisation and fencing treatments at 39 grassland sites worldwide. Strong positive covariance in species responses to both treatments provided support for a growth-defence trade-off: populations that increased with the removal of nutrient limitation (poor competitors) also increased following removal of consumers. This result held globally across 4 years within plant life-history groups and within the majority of individual sites. Thus, a growth-defence trade-off appears to be the norm, and mechanisms maintaining grassland biodiversity may operate within this constraint.
Ecology | 2015
Katja Steinauer; G. David Tilman; Peter D. Wragg; Simone Cesarz; Jane M. Cowles; Karin Pritsch; Peter B. Reich; Wolfgang W. Weisser; Nico Eisenhauer
Anthropogenic changes in biodiversity and atmospheric temperature significantly influence ecosystem processes. However, little is known about potential interactive effects of plant diversity and warming on essential ecosystem properties, such as soil microbial functions and element cycling. We studied the effects of orthogonal manipulations of plant diversity (one, four, and 16 species) and warming (ambient, +1.5 degrees C, and +3 degrees C) on soil microbial biomass, respiration, growth after nutrient additions, and activities of extracellular enzymes in 2011 and 2012 in the BAC (biodiversity and climate) perennial grassland experiment site at Cedar Creek, Minnesota, USA. Focal enzymes are involved in essential biogeochemical processes of the carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycles. Soil microbial biomass and some enzyme activities involved in the C and N cycle increased significantly with increasing plant diversity in both years. In addition, 16-species mixtures buffered warming induced reductions in topsoil water content. We found no interactive effects of plant diversity and warming on soil microbial biomass and growth rates. However, the activity of several enzymes (1,4-beta-glucosidase, 1,4-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, phosphatase, peroxidase) depended on interactions between plant diversity and warming with elevated activities of enzymes involved in the C, N, and P cycles at both high plant diversity and high warming levels. Increasing plant diversity consistently decreased microbial biomass-specific enzyme activities and altered soil microbial growth responses to nutrient additions, indicating that plant diversity changed nutrient limitations and/or microbial community composition. In contrast to our expectations, higher plant diversity only buffered temperature effects on soil water content, but not on microbial functions. Temperature effects on some soil enzymes were greatest at high plant diversity. In total, our results suggest that the fundamental temperature ranges of soil microbial communities may be sufficiently broad to buffer their functioning against changes in temperature and that plant diversity may be a dominant control of soil microbial processes in a changing world.
New Phytologist | 2011
Peter D. Wragg; Steven D. Johnson
Transitions from wind pollination to insect pollination were pivotal to the radiation of land plants, yet only a handful are known and the trait shifts required are poorly understood. We tested the hypothesis that a transition to insect pollination took place in the ancestrally wind-pollinated sedges (Cyperaceae) and that floral traits modified during this transition have functional significance. We paired putatively insect-pollinated Cyperus obtusiflorus and Cyperus sphaerocephalus with related, co-flowering, co-occurring wind-pollinated species, and compared pairs in terms of pollination mode and functional roles of floral traits. Experimentally excluding insects reduced seed set by 56-89% in putatively insect-pollinated species but not in intermingled wind-pollinated species. The pollen of putatively insect-pollinated species was less motile in a wind tunnel than that of wind-pollinated species. Bees, beetles and flies preferred inflorescences, and color-matched white or yellow models, of putatively insect-pollinated species over inflorescences, or color-matched brown models, of wind-pollinated species. Floral scents of putatively insect-pollinated species were chemically consistent with those of other insect-pollinated plants, and attracted pollinators; wind-pollinated species were unscented. These results show that a transition from wind pollination to insect pollination occurred in sedges and shed new light on the function of traits involved in this important transition.
Global Change Biology | 2016
Jane M. Cowles; Peter D. Wragg; Alexandra J. Wright; Jennifer S. Powers; David Tilman
Ecosystems worldwide are increasingly impacted by multiple drivers of environmental change, including climate warming and loss of biodiversity. We show, using a long-term factorial experiment, that plant diversity loss alters the effects of warming on productivity. Aboveground primary productivity was increased by both high plant diversity and warming, and, in concert, warming (≈1.5 °C average above and belowground warming over the growing season) and diversity caused a greater than additive increase in aboveground productivity. The aboveground warming effects increased over time, particularly at higher levels of diversity, perhaps because of warming-induced increases in legume and C4 bunch grass abundances, and facilitative feedbacks of these species on productivity. Moreover, higher plant diversity was associated with the amelioration of warming-induced environmental conditions. This led to cooler temperatures, decreased vapor pressure deficit, and increased surface soil moisture in higher diversity communities. Root biomass (0-30 cm) was likewise consistently greater at higher plant diversity and was greater with warming in monocultures and at intermediate diversity, but at high diversity warming had no detectable effect. This may be because warming increased the abundance of legumes, which have lower root : shoot ratios than the other types of plants. In addition, legumes increase soil nitrogen (N) supply, which could make N less limiting to other species and potentially decrease their investment in roots. The negative warming × diversity interaction on root mass led to an overall negative interactive effect of these two global change factors on the sum of above and belowground biomass, and thus likely on total plant carbon stores. In total, plant diversity increased the effect of warming on aboveground net productivity and moderated the effect on root mass. These divergent effects suggest that warming and changes in plant diversity are likely to have both interactive and divergent impacts on various aspects of ecosystem functioning.
Evolution | 2012
Mark K. Asplen; Emily Bruns; Aaron S. David; R. Ford Denison; Brendan Epstein; Matthew C. Kaiser; Joe M. Kaser; Christelle Lacroix; Emily K. Mohl; Gina Quiram; Kristina K Prescott; John Stanton-Geddes; John B. Vincent; Peter D. Wragg; Georgiana May
The concept of a trade‐off has long played a prominent role in understanding the evolution of organismal interactions such as mutualism, parasitism, and competition. Given the complexity inherent to interactions between different evolutionary entities, ecological factors may especially limit the power of trade‐off models to predict evolutionary change. Here, we use four case studies to examine the importance of ecological context for the study of trade‐offs in organismal interactions: (1) resource‐based mutualisms, (2) parasite transmission and virulence, (3) plant biological invasions, and (4) host range evolution in parasites and parasitoids. In the first two case studies, mechanistic trade‐off models have long provided a strong theoretical framework but face the challenge of testing assumptions under ecologically realistic conditions. Work under the second two case studies often has a strong ecological grounding, but faces challenges in identifying or quantifying the underlying genetic mechanism of the trade‐off. Attention is given to recent studies that have bridged the gap between evolutionary mechanism and ecological realism. Finally, we explore the distinction between ecological factors that mask the underlying evolutionary trade‐offs, and factors that actually change the trade‐off relationship between fitness‐related traits important to organismal interactions.
Ecosphere | 2015
Heather R. Whittington; David Tilman; Peter D. Wragg; Jennifer S. Powers
As temperature is a common regulator of temperate plant phenology, future increases in global temperatures are likely to cause shifts in the timing of plant phenophases such as flowering and senescence, with potential feedbacks on species interactions and carbon cycling. We used a 3-year field warming study in a temperate grassland to investigate the effects of two levels of warming (+ ~1.5°C and + ~3°C) on the phenology of budding, flowering onset, and peak flowering of ten perennial plant species at both individual and population scales. We also examined the effect of warming on green-up and senescence by measuring normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) for one year. Populations and individuals of Amorpha canescens, Dalea purpurea (Petalostemum purpureum), and Andropogon gerardii flowered five to eight days earlier under high warming. For seven species, interannual variability in flowering time equaled or exceeded experimental warming treatment effects in any given year. Responses to warming were not consistent among years for several species, especially Liatris aspera. Warming led to higher NDVI values in the spring, indicating that warming accelerated spring biomass growth but did not significantly affect senescence. These results suggest that the community flowering profile may be altered under warming, potentially affecting pollinator, trophic and competitive interactions, and indicate that the timing to peak biomass may be accelerated, possibly affecting ecosystem carbon cycling.
Science Advances | 2017
Madhav P. Thakur; David Tilman; Oliver Purschke; Marcel Ciobanu; Jane M. Cowles; Forest Isbell; Peter D. Wragg; Nico Eisenhauer
Climate warming reduces biodiversity in simpler environments but enhances it in complex environments. Climate warming is predicted to alter species interactions, which could potentially lead to extinction events. However, there is an ongoing debate whether the effects of warming on biodiversity may be moderated by biodiversity itself. We tested warming effects on soil nematodes, one of the most diverse and abundant metazoans in terrestrial ecosystems, along a gradient of environmental complexity created by a gradient of plant species richness. Warming increased nematode species diversity in complex (16-species mixtures) plant communities (by ~36%) but decreased it in simple (monocultures) plant communities (by ~39%) compared to ambient temperature. Further, warming led to higher levels of taxonomic relatedness in nematode communities across all levels of plant species richness. Our results highlight both the need for maintaining species-rich plant communities to help offset detrimental warming effects and the inability of species-rich plant communities to maintain nematode taxonomic distinctness when warming occur.
Archive | 2018
Michael J. Schuster; Peter D. Wragg; Peter B. Reich
A search strategy was developed to identify literature on the use of revegetation as a strategy to suppress reinvasion of invasive species in grasslands and forests. This dataset summarizes the data points for each article included in the literature analysis.
Ecology | 2018
T. Michael Anderson; Daniel M. Griffith; James B. Grace; Eric M. Lind; Peter B. Adler; Lori A. Biederman; Dana M. Blumenthal; Pedro Daleo; Jennifer Firn; Nicole Hagenah; W. Stanley Harpole; Andrew S. MacDougall; Rebecca L. McCulley; Suzanne M. Prober; Anita C. Risch; Mahesh Sankaran; Martin Schütz; Eric W. Seabloom; Carly J. Stevens; Lauren L. Sullivan; Peter D. Wragg; Elizabeth T. Borer
Plant stoichiometry, the relative concentration of elements, is a key regulator of ecosystem functioning and is also being altered by human activities. In this paper we sought to understand the global drivers of plant stoichiometry and compare the relative contribution of climatic vs. anthropogenic effects. We addressed this goal by measuring plant elemental (C, N, P and K) responses to eutrophication and vertebrate herbivore exclusion at eighteen sites on six continents. Across sites, climate and atmospheric N deposition emerged as strong predictors of plot-level tissue nutrients, mediated by biomass and plant chemistry. Within sites, fertilization increased total plant nutrient pools, but results were contingent on soil fertility and the proportion of grass biomass relative to other functional types. Total plant nutrient pools diverged strongly in response to herbivore exclusion when fertilized; responses were largest in ungrazed plots at low rainfall, whereas herbivore grazing dampened the plant community nutrient responses to fertilization. Our study highlights (1) the importance of climate in determining plant nutrient concentrations mediated through effects on plant biomass, (2) that eutrophication affects grassland nutrient pools via both soil and atmospheric pathways and (3) that interactions among soils, herbivores and eutrophication drive plant nutrient responses at small scales, especially at water-limited sites.