Publication Date
1993
Description
The Unit of Comparative Plant Ecology based at Sheffield University is manipulating the weather artificially at a field site near Buxton, Derbyshire. This experiment is enabling us to study the way in which certain plants, both in the existing vegetation and among potential invaders, may behave in the future. As well as future climate scenarios, a range of land-use conditions are recreated in the experiment. Seeds of species with different geographical distributions have been sown in and their fate is being closely followed. The experiment began in 1990 and will run until at least 1997, by which time it should be possible to identify both vulnerable plants and potential colonists. Already, evidence has been obtained, for sown species from southern England, of benefits to establishment associated with elevated winter temperature and summer drought treatments,
Citation
Buckland, S M.; Grime, J P.; Tippets, J R.; Jackson, A; Thompson, K; Hodgson, J G.; Thorpe, P C.; and Macgillivray, C W., "Changing the Climate of a Limestone Dale" (2024). IGC Proceedings (1993-2023). 1.
https://uknowledge.uky.edu/igc/1993/session30/1
Included in
Agricultural Science Commons, Agronomy and Crop Sciences Commons, Plant Biology Commons, Plant Pathology Commons, Soil Science Commons, Weed Science Commons
Changing the Climate of a Limestone Dale
The Unit of Comparative Plant Ecology based at Sheffield University is manipulating the weather artificially at a field site near Buxton, Derbyshire. This experiment is enabling us to study the way in which certain plants, both in the existing vegetation and among potential invaders, may behave in the future. As well as future climate scenarios, a range of land-use conditions are recreated in the experiment. Seeds of species with different geographical distributions have been sown in and their fate is being closely followed. The experiment began in 1990 and will run until at least 1997, by which time it should be possible to identify both vulnerable plants and potential colonists. Already, evidence has been obtained, for sown species from southern England, of benefits to establishment associated with elevated winter temperature and summer drought treatments,