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Species richness is a strong driver of forest biomass along broad bioclimatic gradients in the Himalayas

Authors :
Chinese Academy of Sciences
The World Academy of Sciences
Fundación Ramón Areces
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Camarero, Jesús Julio [0000-0003-2436-2922]
Peñuelas, Josep [0000-0002-7215-0150]
Dyola, Nita
Sigdel, Shalik Ram
Liang, Eryuan
Babst, Flurin
Camarero, Jesús Julio
Aryal, Sugam
Chettri, Nakul
Gao, Shan
Lu, Xiaoming
Sun, Jian
Wang, Tao
Zhang, Gengxin
Zhu, Haifeng
Piao, Shilong
Peñuelas, Josep
Chinese Academy of Sciences
The World Academy of Sciences
Fundación Ramón Areces
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Camarero, Jesús Julio [0000-0003-2436-2922]
Peñuelas, Josep [0000-0002-7215-0150]
Dyola, Nita
Sigdel, Shalik Ram
Liang, Eryuan
Babst, Flurin
Camarero, Jesús Julio
Aryal, Sugam
Chettri, Nakul
Gao, Shan
Lu, Xiaoming
Sun, Jian
Wang, Tao
Zhang, Gengxin
Zhu, Haifeng
Piao, Shilong
Peñuelas, Josep
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Forest biomass is an important component of terrestrial carbon pools. However, how climate, biodiversity, and structural attributes co-determine spatiotemporal variation in forest biomass remains not well known. We aimed to shed light on these drivers of forest biomass by measuring diversity and structural attributes of tree species in 400-m2 plots located every 100 m along a 4200-m elevational gradient in the eastern Himalayas. We applied structural equation models to test how climate, species richness, structural attributes, and their interactions influence forest biomass. Importantly, species richness was a stronger driver of biomass than environmental and structural attributes such as annual air temperature or stem density. Integrating the availability of energy and the demand for water, potential evapotranspiration was more strongly correlated with biomass than water availability, likely due to the strong influence of the Indian summer monsoon. Thus, interactions between climate and tree community composition ultimately control how much carbon is stored in woody biomass across bioclimatic gradients. This fundamental understanding will support predictive efforts of the forest carbon sink in this hydroclimatically important region and help preserving regional forests as a potent natural solution for climate change mitigation.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442728193
Document Type :
Electronic Resource