2021
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0237893
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The response of culturally important plants to experimental warming and clipping in Pakistan Himalayas

Abstract: The relative effects of climate warming with grazing on medicinally important plants are not fully understood in Hindukush-Himalaya (HKH) region. Therefore, we combined the indigenous knowledge about culturally important therapeutic plants and climate change with experimental warming (open-top chambers) and manual clipping (simulated grazing effect) and compared the relative difference on aboveground biomass and percent cover of plant species at five alpine meadow sites on an elevation gradient (4696 m-3346 m)… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Across Sikkim's zonal cross-section, anomalous warming since 2000, abnormally low snowfall since 2015, and contrastively heavy precipitation since 2007 have been observed. The snowfall seasons are shifting from NDJ, and DJF to JFM, and FMA [96] . Snowfall is declining along elevations up to 4500 m with huge variance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Across Sikkim's zonal cross-section, anomalous warming since 2000, abnormally low snowfall since 2015, and contrastively heavy precipitation since 2007 have been observed. The snowfall seasons are shifting from NDJ, and DJF to JFM, and FMA [96] . Snowfall is declining along elevations up to 4500 m with huge variance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over the years, global ecological changes and environmental devastation triggered by human-induced activities and climate alteration have increased globally (Ofori et al, 2017;Measey et al, 2019). We are now facing enormous pressures that are driving geographic distribution patterns of plants and animals (Behroozian et al, 2020;Gainsbury, 2020), altering ecological community structure (Zhou et al, 2017), and impacting ecosystem stability (Karimi et al, 2021). Such threats have led to significant animal migration, extinction, and population reduction in the Quaternary (Chen et al, 2011;Hoffmann and Sgrò, 2011), resulting in more than 75% alteration in contemporary terrestrial ecosystems (Venter et al, 2016), following extensive agricultural changes and deforestation (Gries et al, 2019), and accelerated expansion of urbanization (Eötvös et al, 2018;Duncan et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%