Diverse anthropogenic disturbances shift Amazon forests along a structural spectrum

Author:

Smith Marielle N12,Stark Scott C1,Taylor Tyeen C3,Schietti Juliana45,de Almeida Danilo Roberti Alves6,Aragón Susan7,Torralvo Kelly5,Lima Albertina P5,de Oliveira Gabriel8,de Assis Rafael Leandro59,Leitold Veronika10,Pontes‐Lopes Aline11,Scoles Ricardo7,de Sousa Vieira Luciana Cristina12,Resende Angelica Faria6,Coppola Alysha I13,Brandão Diego Oliveira5,de Athaydes Silva Junior João14,Lobato Laura F7,Freitas Wagner7,Almeida Daniel7,Souza Mendell S7,Minor David M10,Villegas Juan Camilo15,Law Darin J16,Gonçalves Nathan1,da Rocha Daniel Gomes1718,Guedes Marcelino Carneiro19,Tonini Hélio20,da Silva Kátia Emídio21,van Haren Joost2223,Rosa Diogo Martins5,do Valle Dalton Freitas5,Cordeiro Carlos Leandro24,de Lima Nicolas Zaslavsky7,Shao Gang125,Menor Imma Oliveras26,Conti Georgina27,Florentino Ana Paula5,Montti Lía28,Aragão Luiz EOC11,McMahon Sean M29,Parker Geoffrey G29,Breshears David D1630,Da Costa Antonio Carlos Lola14,Magnusson William E5,Mesquita Rita5,Camargo José Luís C5,de Oliveira Raimundo C31,de Camargo Plinio B32,Saleska Scott R30,Nelson Bruce Walker5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forestry Michigan State University East Lansing MI

2. School of Natural Sciences, College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering Bangor University Bangor UK

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI

4. Departamento de Biologia Universidade Federal do Amazonas Manaus Brazil

5. Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia Manaus Brazil

6. Department of Forest Sciences, “Luiz de Queiroz” College of Agriculture University of São Paulo Piracicaba Brazil

7. Programa de Pós‐Graduação em Recursos Naturais da Amazônia Universidade Federal do Oeste do Pará Santarém Brazil

8. Department of Earth Sciences University of South Alabama Mobile AL

9. Natural History Museum University of Oslo Oslo Norway

10. Department of Geographical Sciences University of Maryland College Park MD

11. Divisão de Observação da Terra e Geoinformática Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais São José dos Campos Brazil

12. Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais Eusébio Brazil

13. Geological Institute Biogeosciences ETH Zurich Zurich Switzerland

14. Instituto de Geociências, Faculdade de Meteorologia Universidade Federal do Pará Belém Brazil

15. Grupo de Investigación en Ecología Aplicada, Facultad de Ingeniería Universidad de Antioquia Medellín Colombia

16. School of Natural Resources and the Environment University of Arizona Tucson AZ

17. Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology, Graduate Group in Ecology University of California–Davis Davis CA

18. Grupo de Ecologia e Conservação de Felinos na Amazônia Instituto de Desenvolvimento Sustentável Mamirauá Tefé Brazil

19. Embrapa Amapá Macapá Brazil

20. Embrapa Pecuária Sul Bagé Brazil

21. Embrapa Amazônia Ocidental Manaus Brazil

22. Biosphere 2, University of Arizona Tucson AZ

23. Honors College University of Arizona Tucson AZ

24. Instituto Internacional para Sustentabilidade Rio de Janeiro Brazil

25. Purdue University Libraries and School of Information Studies West Lafayette IN

26. Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment University of Oxford Oxford UK

27. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal Universidad Nacional de Córdoba Córdoba Argentina

28. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras, Instituto de Geología de Costas y del Cuaternario Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata‐CONICET Mar del Plata Argentina

29. Smithsonian Environmental Research Center Edgewater MD

30. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology University of Arizona Tucson AZ

31. Embrapa Amazônia Oriental Santarém Brazil

32. Laboratório de Ecologia Isotópica, Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura Universidade de São Paulo Piracicaba Brazil

Abstract

Amazon forests are being degraded by myriad anthropogenic disturbances, altering ecosystem and climate function. We analyzed the effects of a range of land‐use and climate‐change disturbances on fine‐scale canopy structure using a large database of profiling canopy lidar collected from disturbed and mature Amazon forest plots. At most of the disturbed sites, surveys were conducted 10–30 years after disturbance, with many exhibiting signs of recovery. Structural impacts differed in magnitude more than in character among disturbance types, producing a gradient of impacts. Structural changes were highly coordinated in a manner consistent across disturbance types, indicating commonalities in regeneration pathways. At the most severely affected site – burned igapó (seasonally flooded forest) – no signs of canopy regeneration were observed, indicating a sustained alteration of microclimates and consequently greater vulnerability to transitioning to a more open‐canopy, savanna‐like state. Notably, disturbances rarely shifted forests beyond the natural background of structural variation within mature plots, highlighting the similarities between anthropogenic and natural disturbance regimes, and indicating a degree of resilience among Amazon forests. Studying diverse disturbance types within an integrated analytical framework builds capacity to predict the risk of degradation‐driven forest transitions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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