Species composition and forest structure explain the temperature sensitivity patterns of productivity in temperate forests
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Published:2018-03-26
Issue:6
Volume:15
Page:1795-1813
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Bohn Friedrich J.ORCID, May Felix, Huth Andreas
Abstract
Abstract. Rising temperatures due to climate change influence the
wood production of forests. Observations show that some temperate forests
increase their productivity, whereas others reduce their productivity. This
study focuses on how species composition and forest structure properties
influence the temperature sensitivity of aboveground wood production (AWP).
It further investigates which forests will increase their productivity the
most with rising temperatures. We described forest structure by leaf area
index, forest height and tree height heterogeneity. Species composition was
described by a functional diversity index (Rao's Q) and a species
distribution index (ΩAWP). ΩAWP quantified
how well species are distributed over the different forest layers with regard
to AWP. We analysed 370 170 forest stands generated with a forest gap model.
These forest stands covered a wide range of possible forest types. For each
stand, we estimated annual aboveground wood production and performed a
climate sensitivity analysis based on 320 different climate time series (of
1-year length). The scenarios differed in mean annual temperature and
annual temperature amplitude. Temperature sensitivity of wood production was
quantified as the relative change in productivity resulting from a
1 ∘C rise in mean annual temperature or annual temperature
amplitude. Increasing ΩAWP positively influenced both
temperature sensitivity indices of forest, whereas forest height showed a
bell-shaped relationship with both indices. Further, we found forests in each
successional stage that are positively affected by temperature rise. For such
forests, large ΩAWP values were important. In the case of young
forests, low functional diversity and small tree height heterogeneity were
associated with a positive effect of temperature on wood production. During
later successional stages, higher species diversity and larger tree height
heterogeneity were an advantage. To achieve such a development, one could
plant below the closed canopy of even-aged, pioneer trees a
climax-species-rich understorey that will build the canopy of the mature
forest. This study highlights that forest structure and species composition
are both relevant for understanding the temperature sensitivity of wood
production.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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