Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment

Aims: Arid environments are resource limited, with scarcity of water the key limiting factor, but hyper-arid environments are rarely studied. We test for spatial and temporal variation in ecologically important characteristics to deduce plant adaptations to the extreme climate. Methods: The endange...

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Main Authors: Thompson, Katy, Gilbert, Francis
Format: Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34148/
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author Thompson, Katy
Gilbert, Francis
author_facet Thompson, Katy
Gilbert, Francis
author_sort Thompson, Katy
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Aims: Arid environments are resource limited, with scarcity of water the key limiting factor, but hyper-arid environments are rarely studied. We test for spatial and temporal variation in ecologically important characteristics to deduce plant adaptations to the extreme climate. Methods: The endangered Sinai Thyme (Thymus decussatus) exists as a set of patches on mountaintops within the St Katherine Protectorate, South Sinai, a hyper-arid environment with rare events of good rains (every 10–15 years). Important Findings: From spatial and temporal patterns of plant mortality, size, condition and flowering among 10 patches on the Mt Sinai massif, we deduce that the incidence and amount of flowering responds relatively quickly (1–2 years) to rainfall fluctuations, but plant growth respond only very slowly. Small individuals are most at risk of death during drought, and a high proportion of plants were dead at the end of 8 years of very low or no rainfall. No recruitment of seedlings was observed even in years of good rainfall. Droughts are expected to become increasingly frequent due to climate change; this may have important consequences for Sinai Thyme and also its associated herbivores, such as the Critically Endangered Sinai Baton Blue (Pseudophilotes sinaicus) whose larval stage feeds exclusively upon the flowers of this plant.
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spelling nottingham-341482020-05-04T16:59:38Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34148/ Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment Thompson, Katy Gilbert, Francis Aims: Arid environments are resource limited, with scarcity of water the key limiting factor, but hyper-arid environments are rarely studied. We test for spatial and temporal variation in ecologically important characteristics to deduce plant adaptations to the extreme climate. Methods: The endangered Sinai Thyme (Thymus decussatus) exists as a set of patches on mountaintops within the St Katherine Protectorate, South Sinai, a hyper-arid environment with rare events of good rains (every 10–15 years). Important Findings: From spatial and temporal patterns of plant mortality, size, condition and flowering among 10 patches on the Mt Sinai massif, we deduce that the incidence and amount of flowering responds relatively quickly (1–2 years) to rainfall fluctuations, but plant growth respond only very slowly. Small individuals are most at risk of death during drought, and a high proportion of plants were dead at the end of 8 years of very low or no rainfall. No recruitment of seedlings was observed even in years of good rainfall. Droughts are expected to become increasingly frequent due to climate change; this may have important consequences for Sinai Thyme and also its associated herbivores, such as the Critically Endangered Sinai Baton Blue (Pseudophilotes sinaicus) whose larval stage feeds exclusively upon the flowers of this plant. Oxford University Press 2015-02-01 Article PeerReviewed Thompson, Katy and Gilbert, Francis (2015) Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment. Journal of Plant Ecology, 8 (1). pp. 79-90. ISSN 1752-993X Spatial variation ; temporal fluctuations ; resource availability ; drought ; Egypt http://jpe.oxfordjournals.org/content/8/1/79 doi:10.1093/jpe/rtu004 doi:10.1093/jpe/rtu004
spellingShingle Spatial variation ; temporal fluctuations ; resource availability ; drought ; Egypt
Thompson, Katy
Gilbert, Francis
Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment
title Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment
title_full Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment
title_short Spatiotemporal variation in the endangered Thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment
title_sort spatiotemporal variation in the endangered thymus decussatus in a hyper-arid environment
topic Spatial variation ; temporal fluctuations ; resource availability ; drought ; Egypt
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34148/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34148/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/34148/