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Climate reverses directionality in the richness–abundance relationship across the World’s main forest biomes

Authors :
Biología vegetal y ecología
Landaren biologia eta ekologia
Madrigal González, Jaime
Calatayud, Joaquín
Ballesteros Cánovas, Juan
Escudero, Adrián
Cayuela, Luis
Rueda, Marta
Ruiz Benito, Paloma
Herrero Méndez, Asier
Aponte, Cristina
Sagardia, Rodrigo
Plumptre, Andrew J.
Dupire, Sylvain
Espinosa, Carlos I.
Tutubalina, Olga
Mynt, Moe
Pataro, Luciano
López Sáez, Jerome
Macía, Manuel J.
Abegg, Meinrad
Zavala, Miguel A.
Quesada Román, Adolfo
Vega Araya, Mauricio
Golubeva, Elena
Timokhina, Yuliya
Stoffel, Markus
Biología vegetal y ecología
Landaren biologia eta ekologia
Madrigal González, Jaime
Calatayud, Joaquín
Ballesteros Cánovas, Juan
Escudero, Adrián
Cayuela, Luis
Rueda, Marta
Ruiz Benito, Paloma
Herrero Méndez, Asier
Aponte, Cristina
Sagardia, Rodrigo
Plumptre, Andrew J.
Dupire, Sylvain
Espinosa, Carlos I.
Tutubalina, Olga
Mynt, Moe
Pataro, Luciano
López Sáez, Jerome
Macía, Manuel J.
Abegg, Meinrad
Zavala, Miguel A.
Quesada Román, Adolfo
Vega Araya, Mauricio
Golubeva, Elena
Timokhina, Yuliya
Stoffel, Markus
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

More tree species can increase the carbon storage capacity of forests (here referred to as the more species hypothesis) through increased tree productivity and tree abundance resulting from complementarity, but they can also be the consequence of increased tree abundance through increased available energy (more individuals hypothesis). To test these two con- trasting hypotheses, we analyse the most plausible pathways in the richness-abundance relationship and its stability along global climatic gradients. We show that positive effect of species richness on tree abundance only prevails in eight of the twenty-three forest regions considered in this study. In the other forest regions, any benefit from having more species is just as likely (9 regions) or even less likely (6 regions) than the effects of having more individuals. We demonstrate that diversity effects prevail in the most productive environ- ments, and abundance effects become dominant towards the most limiting conditions. These findings can contribute to refining cost-effective mitigation strategies based on fostering carbon storage through increased tree diversity. Specifically, in less productive environments, mitigation measures should promote abundance of locally adapted and stress tolerant tree species instead of increasing species richness.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
A.E. was supported by REMEDINAL TE-CM (S2018/EMT-4338). L.C. and M.J.M. were supported through two grants from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competi- tiveness (CGL2013-45634-P, CGL2016-75414-P). M.A.Z. was supported by grant RTI2018-096884-B-C32 (MICINN, Spain). C.A. was supported by the Victorian DELWP iFER (Integrated Forest Ecosystem Research) programme. A.H. was supported by the University of Alcalá (Own Research Programme 2019 Postdoctoral Grant) and Basque Country Government funding support to FisioClimaCO2 (IT1022-16) research group. We thank the MITECO and MAPA (Spain) for granting access to the Spanish Forest Inventory Data., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1430742479
Document Type :
Electronic Resource