Applying climate change refugia to forest management and old‐growth restoration

Author:

Pradhan Kavya1ORCID,Ettinger Ailene K.2ORCID,Case Michael J.2,Hille Ris Lambers Janneke13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

2. The Nature Conservancy Seattle Washington USA

3. Plant Ecology, Institute of Integrative Biology, d‐USYS Zürich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractRecent studies highlight the potential of climate change refugia (CCR) to support the persistence of biodiversity in regions that may otherwise become unsuitable with climate change. However, a key challenge in using CCR for climate resilient management lies in how CCR may intersect with existing forest management strategies, and subsequently influence how landscapes buffer species from negative impacts of warming climate. We address this challenge in temperate coastal forests of the Pacific Northwestern United States, where declines in the extent of late‐successional forests have prompted efforts to restore old‐growth forest structure. One common approach for doing so involves selectively thinning forest stands to enhance structural complexity. However, dense canopy is a key forest feature moderating understory microclimate and potentially buffering organisms from climate change impacts, raising the possibility that approaches for managing forests for old‐growth structure may reduce the extent and number of CCR. We used remotely sensed vegetation indices to identify CCR in an experimental forest with control and thinned (restoration) treatments, and explored the influence of biophysical variables on buffering capacity. We found that remotely sensed vegetation indices commonly used to identify CCR were associated with understory temperature and plant community composition, and thus captured aspects of landscape buffering that might instill climate resilience and be of interest to management. We then examined the interaction between current restoration strategies and CCR, and found that selective thinning for promoting old‐growth structure had only very minor, if any, effects on climatic buffering. In all, our study demonstrates that forest management approaches aimed at restoring old‐growth structure through targeted thinning do not greatly decrease buffering capacity, despite a known link between dense canopy and CCR. More broadly, this study illustrates the value of using remote sensing approaches to identify CCR, facilitating the integration of climate change adaptation with other forest management approaches.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

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

Reference77 articles.

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3. Apodaca M. Tippie M. Verde A. M. Barandino V. Jones B. &Rios J.(2018).Guidelines for Storing and Decommissioning Roads. USDA Forest Service National Technology and Development Program.

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