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Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University of Vermont Burlington, VT 05405 U.S.A.

Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

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Page 1: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges

for the next century

Nicholas J. GotelliDepartment of BiologyUniversity of VermontBurlington, VT 05405

U.S.A.

Page 2: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

0

50

100

150

200

1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000

Year

Ter

agra

ms

of

Nit

rog

en

Fertilizer NOx

Total anthropogenic N fixed

Natural range

Page 3: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 4: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition

• IndividualAltered morphologyChanges in reproduction, survivorship

Page 5: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition

• IndividualAltered morphologyChanges in reproduction, survivorship

• PopulationIncreased long-term extinction riskChanges in short-term dynamics

Page 6: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition• Individual

Altered morphologyChanges in reproduction, survivorship

• Population Increased long-term extinction riskChanges in short-term dynamics

• CommunityChanges in abundance and compositionAltered nutrient transfer and storage

Page 7: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition on Carnivorous Plants

• Life History

• Effects on Individuals

• Effects on Populations

• Effects on Communities

• The Role of Ecologists

Page 8: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition on Carnivorous Plants

• Life History

• Effects on Individuals

• Effects on Populations

• Effects on Communities

• The Role of Ecologists

Page 9: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Carnivorous plants: well-known, but poorly studied

Page 10: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Carnivory in plants

• Phylogenetically diverse

• Morphological, chemical adaptations for attracting, capturing, digesting arthropods

• Common in low N habitats

• Poor competitors for light, nutrients

Page 11: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Family Sarraceniaceae

Genus Common Name

Number of Species

Distribution

Darlingtonia Cobra Lilly 1 Northwest USA

Heliamphora Sun Pitchers 5 North-central South America

Sarracenia Pitcher Plants 8 Eastern USA, Canada

Page 12: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Genus Sarracenia

• 8 described species

• Center of diversity in southeastern US

• Many subvarieties

• Extensive hybridization

• Sarracenia purpurea (New Jersey- Canada)

Page 13: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

The Northern Pitcher Plant Sarracenia purpurea

• Perennial plant of low-N peatlands

• Lifespan 30-50 y

• Arthropod prey capture in water-filled pitchers

• Diverse inquiline community in pitchers

Page 14: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 15: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 16: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

The Inquilines

Wyeomyia smithii

Metriocnemus knabiHabrotrocha rosa

Blaesoxipha fletcheri

Sarraceniopus gibsoni

Page 17: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Inquiline food web

Page 18: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Phyllodia

• Flat leaves

• No prey capture

• High concentration of chlorophyll, stomates

• Photosynthetically more efficient than pitchers

Page 19: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Flowering Stalks

• Single stalk per rosette

• Flowering after3 to 5 years

• Bumblebee, fly pollinated

• Short-distancedispersal of seeds

Page 20: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Leaf Senescence

• End-of-season die off

• Production of new leaves in following spring

• Annual increase in rosette diameter

Page 21: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition on Carnivorous Plants

• Life History

• Effects on Individuals

• Effects on Populations

• Effects on Communities

• The Role of Ecologists

Page 22: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Nutrient Treatments

• Distilled H20

• Micronutrients• Low N (0.1 mg/L)• High N (1.0 mg/L)• Low P (0.025 mg/L)• High P (0.25 mg/L)

• N:P(1) Low N + Low P• N:P(2) Low N + High P• N:P(3) High N + Low P

Nutrient Source:

Micronutrients: Hoaglands

N: NH4Cl

P: NaH2PO4

Page 23: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Anthropogenic N additions alter growth and morphology

Page 24: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 25: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Anthropogenic N additions alter growth and morphology

Increasing N

Page 26: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of Anthropogenic N additions

• Increased production of phyllodiaPhenotypic shift from carnivory to

photosynthesis

• Increased probability of flowering

Page 27: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Contrasting effects of anthropogenic N vs. N derived

from prey

Page 28: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Food Addition Experiment

• Ecological “press” experiment

• Food supplemented with house flies• Treatments: 0, 2, 4 ,6, 8,10,12, 14 flies/week

• Plants harvested after one field season

Page 29: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Food additions do not alter growth and morphology

Increasing prey

Page 30: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

N uptake increases with food level

Page 31: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

P uptake increases with food level

Page 32: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

N:P ratio decreases with increasing food supply

Page 33: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Altered N:P ratios suggest P limitation under ambient conditions

P limitation (Koerselman & Meuleman 1996, Olde Venternik et al. in press)

Ambient

Page 34: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Food additions do not alter growth and morphology

Increasing prey

Page 35: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Anthropogenic N additions alter growth and morphology

Increasing N

Page 36: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Contrasting effects of anthropogenic and natural sources of N

Anthropogenic NAltered N:P ratiosMorphological shiftReduction in prey uptake

Prey NUptake, storage of N & PNo morphological shiftsContinued prey uptake

Page 37: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition on Carnivorous Plants

• Life History

• Effects on Individuals

• Effects on Populations

• Effects on Communities

• The Role of Ecologists

Page 38: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 39: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 40: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Study Sites

Page 41: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 42: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 43: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Demography survey

• 100 adult, juvenile plants tagged at each site

• Plants censused and measured each year

• Seed plantings to estimate recruitment functions

Page 44: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 45: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 46: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 47: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Recruits Juveniles Adults Flowering Adults

Sarracenia matrix model

Page 48: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Recruits Juveniles Adults Flowering Adults

Hawley Bog Transitions

0.10

4.00

0.04

0.09

0.18

0.83

0.95 0.70 0.17

Page 49: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Recruits Juveniles Adults Flowering Adults

Molly Bog Transitions

0.10

4.00

0.13

0.17

0.10

0.66

0.85 0.71 0.31

Page 50: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Matrix Transition Model(stationary)

nt+1 = Ant

Population vector at time (t + 1)

Transition matrixPopulation vector at time (t)

Page 51: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Population Projections

Site r individuals/individual•year Doubling Time

Hawley Bog 0.00456 152 y

Molly Bog 0.00554 125 y

Page 52: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Deterministic Model: Results

• Growth, survivorship, and reproduction are closely balanced in both sites

• Doubling times > 100 y

• Juvenile, adult persistence contribute most to population growth rate

• Sexual reproduction, recruitment relatively unimportant

Page 53: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Matrix Transition Model(stochastic)

nt+1 = Atnt

Population vector at time (t + 1)

Random transition matrix at time (t)

Population vector at time (t)

Page 54: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Hawley Bog

-0.30-0.20-0.100.000.100.200.30

Deter

min

istic

ME (m

ild)

ME (s

ever

e)

ES (mild

)

ES (sev

ere)

r

Page 55: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Hawley Bog

200

400

600

800

1000

0 5 10 15 20 25Time Step

n

DeterministicES (severe)ES (mild)

Page 56: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Stochastic Model: Results

• Cannot reject H0 (r = 0.0)

• Environmental variation can lead to a substantial risk of long-term extinction (0.3 < p(ext) < 0.6)

Page 57: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

How do N and P concentrations affect population growth of

Sarracenia?

Page 58: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 59: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Nutrient Addition Experiment

• 10 juveniles, 10 adults/treatment

• Nutrients added to leaves twice/month

• Nutrient concentrations bracket observed field values

• Nutrient treatments maintained 1998, 1999

• “Press” experiment

Page 60: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 61: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Nutrient Treatments

• Distilled H20

• Micronutrients• Low N (0.1 mg/L)• High N (1.0 mg/L)• Low P (0.025 mg/L)• High P (0.25 mg/L)

• N:P(1) Low N + Low P• N:P(2) Low N + High P• N:P(3) High N + Low P

Nutrient Source:

Micronutrients: Hoaglands

N: NH4Cl

P: NaH2PO4

Page 62: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N additions

• Increased production of phyllodia

• Increased probability of flowering

Page 63: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N additions

• Increased production of phyllodia

• Increased probability of flowering

• Decreased juvenile survivorship

Page 64: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Population Growth Rate(Deterministic)

-0.15

-0.10

-0.05

0.00

0.05

r

Distilled Micros Low N

High N Low P High P

NP (2) NP (1) NP (3)

LLM

H

H

Page 65: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Population Growth Rate(Measurement Error)

-0.40

-0.35

-0.30

-0.25

-0.20

-0.15

-0.10

-0.05

0.00

0.05

0.10

Distil

led

Mic

ros

Low N

High

N

Low P

High

P

NP (2)

NP (1)

NP (3)

r

H

ML

H

L

Page 66: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of Nitrogen on Demography: Results

• Population growth rates respond to different N and P regimes

• Population growth rate decreases in response to increasing N

• Population growth rate decreases in responses to increasing N:P

Page 67: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Modeling Long-term Environmental Change

Observed N Deposition

Long-termForecast

N(t)

Transition Matrix (t)

PopulationStructure (t)

Time Series Modeling

Transition Function

Population Time SeriesExtinction RiskTime to Extinction

MatrixMultiplication

Page 68: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Modeling Long-term Environmental Change

Observed N Deposition

Long-termForecast

N(t)

Transition Matrix (t)

PopulationStructure (t)

Time Series Modeling

Transition Function

Population Time SeriesExtinction RiskTime to Extinction

MatrixMultiplication

Page 69: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

N monitoring

• National Atmospheric Deposition Program

• NH4, NO3 measured as mg/l/yr

• Annual data 1984-1998

• Monitoring sitesShelburne, VTQuabbin, MA

Page 70: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

Quabbin, MA Shelburne, VT

NH4

N03

Page 71: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

Quabbin, MA Shelburne, VT

NH4

N03

Page 72: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Regression Models

Ordinary Least Squares (OLS)

Nt = a + bt + e

First-order auto-regressive (AR-1)

Nt = a +bNt-1 + e

Page 73: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Quabbin (AR-1)

0.01

0.1

1

10

1 10 19 28 37 46

Year

N (m

g/l/y

r) b = 0.947

b = 1.000

b = 1.053

Quabbin (OLS)

00.10.20.30.40.50.60.7

1 10 19 28 37 46

Year

N (m

g/l/y

) b = -0.004

b = 0.000

b = 0.004

Shelburne (AR-1)

0.01

0.1

1

10

1 10 19 28 37 46

Year

N (m

g/l/y

)

b = 0.978

b = 1.000

b = 1.022

Shelburne (OLS)

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

1 10 19 28 37 46

Year

N (m

g/l/y

) b = -0.001

b = 0.000

b = 0.001

Page 74: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Modeling Long-term Environmental Change

Observed N Deposition

Long-termForecast

N(t)

Transition Matrix (t)

PopulationStructure (t)

Time Series Modeling

Transition Function

Population Time SeriesExtinction RiskTime to Extinction

MatrixMultiplication

Page 75: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Establishing Transition Functions

• Linear interpolation between observed data points (n = 3)

• Asymptotic transitions at extreme levels of nitrogen:pij = observed pij if [N] < 0.01 mg/l/yr

pij = 0.0 if [N] > 10.0 mg/l/yr

• Logarithmic response curve

Page 76: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

-3 -2 -1 0 1 2

Log10 [N]

Ad

ult

s →

Ad

ult

s

ExtrapolatedObserved

Modeling Demographic Transitions as a Function of Nitrogen

Page 77: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Modeling Long-term Environmental Change

Observed N Deposition

Long-termForecast

N(t)

Transition Matrix (t)

PopulationStructure (t)

Time Series Modeling

Transition Function

Population Time SeriesExtinction RiskTime to Extinction

MatrixMultiplication

Page 78: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Matrix Transition Model(changing environment)

nt+1 = Atnt

Population vector at time (t + 1)

Sequentially changing transition matrix at time (t)

Population vector at time (t)

Page 79: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Estimated population size at Hawley bog

Stage Number of individuals

Recruits 1500

Juveniles 23,500

Non-flowering Adults 1400

Flowering Adults 500

Page 80: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Quabbin Exponential Forecast Models (AR-1)

Scenario Annual % Change

P (ext) at 100 y

Time to ext (p = 0.95)

Best case -4.7% 0.00 > 10,000 y

No change 0.0% 0.038 650 y

Small increase

1% 0.378 290 y

Worst case 4.7% 0.996 70 y

Page 81: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Shelburne Exponential Forecast Models (AR-1)

Scenario Annual % Change

P (ext) at 100 y

Time to ext (p = 0.95)

Best case -2.2% 0.158 > 10,000 y

No change 0.0% 0.510 230 y

Small increase

1.0% 0.694 200 y

Worst case 2.2% 0.838 140 y

Page 82: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Shelburne Nitrogen Forecast Model

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

1 10 19 28 37 46

Year

Po

pu

lati

on

Siz

e

AR

OLS

Page 83: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Forecasting Models for Nitrogen Deposition: Results

• Increasing or stationary models of Nitrogen deposition drive Sarracenia populations to extinction

• Extinction risk declines with reduced nitrogen

• Correlated nitrogen series can induce cycles and complex population dynamics

Page 84: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition on Carnivorous Plants

• Life History

• Effects on Individuals

• Effects on Populations

• Effects on Communities

• The Role of Ecologists

Page 85: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Sarracenia Nutrient Feedback Loop

PitcherNutrient

Pool [N,P]

InquilineCommunity

ArthropodPrey

PlantGrowth

AtmosphericDeposition

Page 86: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Sarracenia Nutrient Feedback Loop

PitcherNutrient

Pool [N,P]

InquilineCommunity

ArthropodPrey

PlantGrowth

AtmosphericDeposition

Page 87: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Sarracenia Nutrient Feedback Loop

PitcherNutrient

Pool [N,P]

InquilineCommunity

ArthropodPrey

PlantGrowth

AtmosphericDeposition

Page 88: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Sarracenia Nutrient Feedback Loop

PitcherNutrient

Pool [N,P]

InquilineCommunity

ArthropodPrey

PlantGrowth

AtmosphericDeposition

Page 89: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Nutrients → Inquilines

• Manipulate [N], [P] in leaves

• Orthogonal “regression” design

• Maintain [] in a “press” experiment

Page 90: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Response Surface Experimenal Design

[N]0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

[P]

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Page 91: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of [N,P] on Inquiline Abundance

0

10

20

30

40

01

23

45

6

0123456

Rot

ifer

Abu

ndan

ce

[P]

[N]

Page 92: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Sarracenia Nutrient Feedback Loop

PitcherNutrient

Pool [N,P]

InquilineCommunity

ArthropodPrey

PlantGrowth

AtmosphericDeposition

Page 93: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Inquilines → Nutrients

• Manipulate [N], [P] in leaves

• Orthogonal “regression” design

• Establish initial [] in a “pulse” experiment

Page 94: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Response Surface Experimenal Design

[N]0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

[P]

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Page 95: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Null Hypothesis

[N]0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

[P]

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Page 96: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Community Regulation of Nutrients

[N]0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

[P]

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Page 97: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 98: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Sarracenia Nutrient Feedback Loop

PitcherNutrient

Pool [N,P]

InquilineCommunity

ArthropodPrey

PlantGrowth

AtmosphericDeposition

Page 99: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Nutrients ↔ Inquilines

),,(

),,(

tNIgdt

dI

tINfdt

dN

Page 100: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 101: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 102: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Effects of N Deposition on Carnivorous Plants

• Life History

• Effects on Individuals

• Effects on Populations

• Effects on Communities

• The Role of Ecologists

Page 103: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

0

50

100

150

200

1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000

Year

Ter

agra

ms

of

Nit

rog

en

Fertilizer NOx

Total anthropogenic N fixed

Natural range

Page 104: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Ecology ≠

Environmental Science

Page 105: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Reasons for Studying Ecology

Page 106: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Reasons for Studying Ecology

• Natural History

Page 107: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 108: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Reasons for Studying Ecology

• Natural History

• Field Studies & Experiments

Page 109: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University
Page 110: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Reasons for Studying Ecology

• Natural History

• Field Studies & Experiments

• Statistics & Data Analysis

Page 111: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Population Growth Rate(Deterministic)

-0.15

-0.10

-0.05

0.00

0.05

r

Distilled Micros Low N

High N Low P High P

NP (2) NP (1) NP (3)

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

Page 112: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Reasons for Studying Ecology

• Natural History

• Field Studies & Experiments

• Statistics & Data Analysis

• Modeling

Page 113: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

),,(

),,(

tNIgdt

dI

tINfdt

dN

PitcherNutrient

Pool [N,P]

InquilineCommunity

ArthropodPrey

PlantGrowth

AtmosphericDeposition

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

1 10 19 28 37 46

Year

Po

pu

lati

on

Siz

e

AR

OLS

Page 114: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Reasons for Studying Ecology

• Natural History

• Field Studies & Experiments

• Statistics & Data Analysis

• Modeling

• Collaboration

Page 115: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Aaron M. Ellison

Harvard Forest

Page 116: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Conclusions• Anthropogenic deposition of N is a major ecological

challenge

Page 117: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Conclusions• Anthropogenic deposition of N is a major ecological

challenge• Carnivorous plants in ombrotrophic bogs are a model

system

Page 118: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Conclusions• Anthropogenic deposition of N is a major ecological

challenge• Carnivorous plants in ombrotrophic bogs are a model

system• Individual response

plants alter morphology and growth in response to N:P ratios

Page 119: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Conclusions• Anthropogenic deposition of N is a major ecological

challenge• Carnivorous plants in ombrotrophic bogs are a model

system• Individual response

plants alter morphology and growth in response to N:P ratios

• Population response N and P environments affect population growth rate

Page 120: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University

Conclusions• Anthropogenic deposition of N is a major ecological

challenge• Carnivorous plants in ombrotrophic bogs are a model

system• Individual response

plants alter morphology and growth in response to N:P ratios

• Population response N and P environments affect population growth rate

• Community response Further study of nutrient ↔ inquiline feedback loop

Page 121: Nitrogen deposition and extinction risk in carnivorous plants: ecological challenges for the next century Nicholas J. Gotelli Department of Biology University