TY - JOUR
T1 - Plant-trait-based modeling assessment of ecosystem-service sensitivity to land-use change
AU - Quétier, Fabien
AU - Lavorel, Sandra
AU - Thuiller, Wilfried
AU - Davies, Ian
PY - 2007/12
Y1 - 2007/12
N2 - Evidence is accumulating that the continued provision of essential ecosystem services is vulnerable to land-use change. Yet, we lack a strong scientific basis for this vulnerability as the processes that drive ecosystem-service delivery often remain unclear. In this paper, we use plant traits to assess ecosystem-service sensitivity to land-use change in subalpine grasslands. We use a trait-based plant classification (plant functional types, PFTs) in a landscape modeling platform to model community dynamics under contrasting but internally consistent land-use change scenarios. We then use predictive models of relevant ecosystem attributes, based on quantitative plant traits, to make projections of ecosystemservice delivery. We show that plant traits and PFTs are effective predictors of relevant ecosystem attributes for a range of ecosystem services including provisioning (fodder), cultural (land stewardship), regulating (landslide and avalanche risk), and supporting services (plant diversity). By analyzing the relative effects of the physical environment and land use on relevant ecosystem attributes, we also show that these ecosystem services are most sensitive to changes in grassland management, supporting current agri-environmental policies aimed at maintaining mowing of subalpine grasslands in Europe.
AB - Evidence is accumulating that the continued provision of essential ecosystem services is vulnerable to land-use change. Yet, we lack a strong scientific basis for this vulnerability as the processes that drive ecosystem-service delivery often remain unclear. In this paper, we use plant traits to assess ecosystem-service sensitivity to land-use change in subalpine grasslands. We use a trait-based plant classification (plant functional types, PFTs) in a landscape modeling platform to model community dynamics under contrasting but internally consistent land-use change scenarios. We then use predictive models of relevant ecosystem attributes, based on quantitative plant traits, to make projections of ecosystemservice delivery. We show that plant traits and PFTs are effective predictors of relevant ecosystem attributes for a range of ecosystem services including provisioning (fodder), cultural (land stewardship), regulating (landslide and avalanche risk), and supporting services (plant diversity). By analyzing the relative effects of the physical environment and land use on relevant ecosystem attributes, we also show that these ecosystem services are most sensitive to changes in grassland management, supporting current agri-environmental policies aimed at maintaining mowing of subalpine grasslands in Europe.
KW - Central French Alps
KW - Climate change
KW - Ecosystem management
KW - LAMOS (landscape modeling shell)
KW - Land-use change scenarios
KW - Leaf-height-seed plant strategy scheme (LHS)
KW - Subalpine grasslands
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=38049159671&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1890/06-0750.1
DO - 10.1890/06-0750.1
M3 - Article
SN - 1051-0761
VL - 17
SP - 2377
EP - 2386
JO - Ecological Applications
JF - Ecological Applications
IS - 8
ER -