Selective logging destabilizes the functioning and composition of forest ecosystems at multiple spatial scales

Author:

Qiao Xuetao1ORCID,Lamy Thomas2ORCID,Wang Shaopeng3ORCID,Hautier Yann4ORCID,Geng Yan1ORCID,Han Zhuoxiu1,Zhang Naili5ORCID,He Huaijiang6,Zhang Zhonghui6,Zhang Chunyu1ORCID,Zhao Xiuhai1ORCID,von Gadow Klaus178ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Center of Forest Management Engineering of State Forestry and Grassland Administration, Beijing Forestry University Beijing China

2. MARBEC, University of Montpellier, CNRS, Ifremer, IRD Montpellier France

3. Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes of the Ministry of Education, Institute of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University Beijing China

4. Department of Biology, Ecology and Biodiversity Group, Utrecht University Utrecht Netherlands

5. The Key Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation of Ministry of Education, Beijing Forestry University Beijing China

6. Jilin Provincial Academy of Forestry Sciences Changchun China

7. Faculty of Forestry and Forest Ecology, Georg‐August‐University Göttingen, Büsgenweg Göttingen Germany

8. Department of Forest and Wood Science, University of Stellenbosch Stellenbosch South Africa

Abstract

Selective logging is one of the most prevalent land uses of forests worldwide, affecting biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. However, the effect of selective logging on the dual nature of temporal stability, and the scale dependence of this effect, remain to be elucidated. By conducting several decade‐long experiments in temperate forest ecosystems, we tested the effects of selective logging on aggregate and compositional stability at multiple spatial scales. As expected, forest ecosystem stability at larger spatial scales was enhanced both by the stability of local scales (i.e. α stability) and asynchronous dynamics among local communities (i.e. spatial asynchrony). We found that the negative effects of selective logging on both facets of forest stability propagated from local to larger spatial scales due to reduced α stability and the biological insurance effects of α diversity. However, both spatial aggregate and compositional asynchrony were not affected by selective logging. Interestingly, despite the selective logging, α diversity still provided biological insurance effects for maintaining aggregate and compositional stability. Our results imply that selective logging may destabilize the aggregate ecosystem functioning and species composition of forest ecosystems at local and larger spatial scales. To our knowledge, this study provides the first evidence of the scale dependence of aggregate and compositional stability of forest ecosystems in response to selective logging. Our findings suggest that forest management should avoid excessive selective logging and strive to protect forest diversity to safeguard the sustainability of the functioning and composition of natural forest ecosystems at multiple spatial scales.Keywords: aggregate stability, compositional stability, diversity, ecosystem functioning, spatial asynchrony, stability

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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