Warming, drought, and disturbances lead to shifts in functional composition: A millennial‐scale analysis for Amazonian and Andean sites

Author:

van der Sande Masha T.1ORCID,Bush Mark B.2ORCID,Åkesson Christine M.2,Berrio Juan Carlos3,Correia Metrio Alex4,Flantua Suzette G. A.5ORCID,Hooghiemstra Henry6,Maezumi S. Yoshi7,McMichael Crystal N. H.6ORCID,Montoya Encarni8,Mosblech Nicole A. S.2,de Novaes Nascimento Majoi6,Peña‐Claros Marielos1,Poorter Lourens1,Raczka Marco F.9,Gosling William D.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group Wageningen University & Research Wageningen The Netherlands

2. Institute for Global Ecology Florida Institute of Technology Melbourne Florida USA

3. School of Geography, Geology and the Environment University of Leicester Leicester UK

4. Instituto de Geologia Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Mexico City Mexico

5. Department of Biological Sciences University of Bergen and Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research Bergen Norway

6. Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

7. Department of Archaeology Max Planck Institute for Geoanthropology Jena Germany

8. Institute of Geosciences Barcelona (GEO3BCN) CSIC Barcelona Spain

9. Department of Geography and Environmental Science University of Reading Reading UK

Abstract

AbstractTropical forests are changing in composition and productivity, probably in response to changes in climate and disturbances. The responses to these multiple environmental drivers, and the mechanisms underlying the changes, remain largely unknown. Here, we use a functional trait approach on timescales of 10,000 years to assess how climate and disturbances influence the community‐mean adult height, leaf area, seed mass, and wood density for eight lowland and highland forest landscapes. To do so, we combine data of eight fossil pollen records with functional traits and proxies for climate (temperature, precipitation, and El Niño frequency) and disturbances (fire and general disturbances). We found that temperature and disturbances were the most important drivers of changes in functional composition. Increased water availability (high precipitation and low El Niño frequency) generally led to more acquisitive trait composition (large leaves and soft wood). In lowland forests, warmer climates decreased community‐mean height probably because of increased water stress, whereas in highland forests warmer climates increased height probably because of upslope migration of taller species. Disturbance increased the abundance of acquisitive, disturbance‐adapted taxa with small seeds for quick colonization of disturbed sites, large leaves for light capture, and soft wood to attain fast height growth. Fire had weak effects on lowland forests but led to more stress‐adapted taxa that are tall with fast life cycles and small seeds that can quickly colonize burned sites. Site‐specific analyses were largely in line with cross‐site analyses, except for varying site‐level effects of El Niño frequency and fire activity, possibly because regional patterns in El Niño are not a good predictor of local changes, and charcoal abundances do not reflect fire intensity or severity. With future global changes, tropical Amazonian and Andean forests may transition toward shorter, drought‐ and disturbance‐adapted forests in the lowlands but taller forests in the highlands.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

H2020 European Research Council

National Science Foundation

National Geographic Society

Trond Mohn Stiftelse

Universitetet i Bergen

European Commission

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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