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Global climate change will increase the abundance of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing trees in much of North America.

Authors :
Liao, Wenying
Menge, Duncan N. L.
Lichstein, Jeremy W.
Ángeles‐Pérez, Gregorio
Source :
Global Change Biology. Nov2017, Vol. 23 Issue 11, p4777-4787. 11p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Symbiotic nitrogen (N)-fixing trees can drive N and carbon cycling and thus are critical components of future climate projections. Despite detailed understanding of how climate influences N-fixation enzyme activity and physiology, comparatively little is known about how climate influences N-fixing tree abundance. Here, we used forest inventory data from the USA and Mexico ( >125,000 plots) along with climate data to address two questions: (1) How does the abundance distribution of N-fixing trees (rhizobial, actinorhizal, and both types together) vary with mean annual temperature ( MAT) and precipitation ( MAP)? (2) How will changing climate shift the abundance distribution of N-fixing trees? We found that rhizobial N-fixing trees were nearly absent below 15°C MAT, but above 15°C MAT, they increased in abundance as temperature rose. We found no evidence for a hump-shaped response to temperature throughout the range of our data. Rhizobial trees were more abundant in dry than in wet ecosystems. By contrast, actinorhizal trees peaked in abundance at 5-10°C MAT and were least abundant in areas with intermediate precipitation. Next, we used a climate-envelope approach to project how N-fixing tree relative abundance might change in the future. The climate-envelope projection showed that rhizobial N-fixing trees will likely become more abundant in many areas by 2080, particularly in the southern USA and western Mexico, due primarily to rising temperatures. Projections for actinorhizal N-fixing trees were more nuanced due to their nonmonotonic dependence on temperature and precipitation. Overall, the dominant trend is that warming will increase N-fixing tree abundance in much of the USA and Mexico, with large increases up to 40° North latitude. The quantitative link we provide between climate and N-fixing tree abundance can help improve the representation of symbiotic N fixation in Earth System Models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13541013
Volume :
23
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Global Change Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
125492161
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13716