Historical tree phenology data reveal the seasonal rhythms of the Congo Basin rainforest

Author:

Kearsley Elizabeth12ORCID,Verbeeck Hans1,Stoffelen Piet3,Janssens Steven B.34,Yakusu Emmanuel Kasongo567,Kosmala Margaret89,De Mil Tom10,Bauters Marijn1112ORCID,Kitima Elasi Ramanzani13,Ndiapo José Mbifo13,Chuda Adelard Lonema13,Richardson Andrew D.1415ORCID,Wingate Lisa16,Ilondea Bhély Angoboy5617,Beeckman Hans6,van den Bulcke Jan5,Boeckx Pascal11,Hufkens Koen1216

Affiliation:

1. Computational and Applied Vegetation Ecology Lab, Department of Environment, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering Ghent University Gent Belgium

2. BlueGreen Labs Melsele Belgium

3. Meise Botanic Garden Meise Belgium

4. Department of Biology, Leuven Plant Institute KULeuven Leuven Belgium

5. UGent‐Woodlab (Laboratory of Wood Technology), Department of Environment, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering Ghent University Gent Belgium

6. Service of Wood Biology Royal Museum for Central Africa Tervuren Belgium

7. Faculté de gestion des ressources naturelles renouvelables Université de Kisangani Kisangani Democratic Republic of Congo

8. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA

9. CIBO Technologies Cambridge Massachusetts USA

10. Forest is Life, TERRA Teaching and Research Centre, Gembloux Agro Bio‐Tech University of Liège Gembloux Belgium

11. Isotope Bioscience Laboratory ‐ ISOFYS, Department of Green Chemistry and Technology Ghent University Gent Belgium

12. Research Group of Plants and Ecosystems (PLECO), Department of Biology University of Antwerp Wilrijk Belgium

13. Institut National pour l'Etude et la Recherche Agronomiques‐INERA Yangambi Democratic Republic of Congo

14. Center for Ecosystem Science and Society Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USA

15. School of Informatics, Computing and Cyber Systems Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USA

16. INRAE, UMR ISPA Villenave d'Ornon France

17. Institut National pour l'Étude et la Recherche Agronomiques Kinshasa Democratic Republic of Congo

Abstract

AbstractTropical forest phenology directly affects regional carbon cycles, but the relation between species‐specific and whole‐canopy phenology remains largely uncharacterized. We present a unique analysis of historical tropical tree phenology collected in the central Congo Basin, before large‐scale impacts of human‐induced climate change. Ground‐based long‐term (1937–1956) phenological observations of 140 tropical tree species are recovered, species‐specific phenological patterns analyzed and related to historical meteorological records, and scaled to characterize stand‐level canopy dynamics. High phenological variability within and across species and in climate–phenology relationships is observed. The onset of leaf phenophases in deciduous species was triggered by drought and light availability for a subset of species and showed a species‐specific decoupling in time along a bi‐modal seasonality. The majority of the species remain evergreen, although central African forests experience relatively low rainfall. Annually a maximum of 1.5% of the canopy is in leaf senescence or leaf turnover, with overall phenological variability dominated by a few deciduous species, while substantial variability is attributed to asynchronous events of large and/or abundant trees. Our results underscore the importance of accounting for constituent signals in canopy‐wide scaling and the interpretation of remotely sensed phenology signals.

Funder

Belgian Federal Science Policy Office

Bijzonder Onderzoeksfonds UGent

Publisher

Wiley

Reference75 articles.

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