Elevation‐dependent patterns of borer‐mediated snow‐gum dieback are associated with subspecies' trait differences and environmental variation

Author:

Bryant Callum1ORCID,Ball Marilyn C.1ORCID,Borevitz Justin1ORCID,Brookhouse Matthew T.2ORCID,Carle Hannah1ORCID,Cunningham Pia1,Davey Mei1,Davies James1,Eason Ashleigh1,Erskine Joseph D.1ORCID,Fuenzalida Tomas I.1ORCID,Grishin Dmitry1ORCID,Harris Rosalie1ORCID,Kriticos Jessica1,Midson Aaron2ORCID,Nicotra Adrienne B.1ORCID,Nshuti Annabelle1ORCID,Ward‐Jones Jessica2ORCID,Yau Yolanda1ORCID,Young Olivia1ORCID,Bothwell Helen13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research School of Biology Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

2. Fenner School of Environment and Society Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

3. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractSubalpine forests worldwide face the synergistic threats of global warming and increased biotic attack, and the collapse or transition of subalpine forests is predicted in south‐eastern Australia under future climates. The recent widespread dieback of subalpine snow‐gum forests due to increased activity of a native wood‐boring longicorn beetle, Phoracantha mastersii, suggests this process may already be underway. We investigated how variation in tree tissue traits and environmental conditions correlated with elevation‐dependent spatial patterns of forest mortality. We hypothesized that increased vulnerability of subalpine snow gums to wood‐borer‐mediated dieback at intermediate elevations was associated with poorly resolved differences in traits between montane (Eucalyptus pauciflora subsp. pauciflora) and subalpine (E. pauciflora subsp. niphophila) snow‐gum subspecies. We first sought to characterize variation and elevation‐dependent transitions in 20 structural and drought‐related functional traits among 120 healthy trees distributed along a 1000 m elevation transect that spanned the subspecies transition zone. Secondly, we surveyed 774 trees across 53 sites between 1280 and 1980 m a.s.l. to explore associations between borer‐damage severity, elevation, subspecies and a subset of traits that differed between subspecies. We observed evidence for both continuous trait variation in response to changing elevation (10/20 traits) and discrete shifts in mean trait values across the transition between subspecies distributions (5/20 traits). Increased borer‐damage severity across the montane‐to‐subalpine subspecies transition was correlated with lower bark thickness, whereas reduced borer damage at the highest elevations was associated with greater precipitation and lower temperatures. Our results suggest that due to possessing distinct traits associated with increased borer susceptibility, subalpine snow‐gum forests may be subject to an increased risk of severe borer‐mediated forest dieback under warmer and drier future climates. Identifying traits contributing to species' distribution limits and biotic‐agent vulnerability remains critical for predicting, monitoring and possibly mitigating forest and vegetation declines under future climates.

Publisher

Wiley

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