下层林
小气候
环境科学
全球变暖
天蓬
树冠
生物多样性
大气科学
生态学
气候变化
生物
地质学
作者
Pieter De Frenne,Florian Zellweger,Francisco Rodríguez‐Sánchez,Brett R. Scheffers,Kristoffer Hylander,Miska Luoto,Mark Vellend,Kris Verheyen,Jonathan Lenoir
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41559-019-0842-1
摘要
Macroclimate warming is often assumed to occur within forests despite the potential for tree cover to modify microclimates. Here, using paired measurements, we compared the temperatures under the canopy versus in the open at 98 sites across 5 continents. We show that forests function as a thermal insulator, cooling the understory when ambient temperatures are hot and warming the understory when ambient temperatures are cold. The understory versus open temperature offset is magnified as temperatures become more extreme and is of greater magnitude than the warming of land temperatures over the past century. Tree canopies may thus reduce the severity of warming impacts on forest biodiversity and functioning. Comparing temperatures in the forest understory versus open habitat across boreal, temperate and tropical biomes, the authors show that tree canopies act as thermal insulators that buffer the understory against temperature extremes.
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