小气候
气候变化
生物多样性
下层林
森林动态
环境科学
天蓬
森林生态学
树冠
人口
生态系统
地理
农林复合经营
生态学
生物
人口学
社会学
作者
Pieter Sanczuk,Karen De Pauw,Emiel De Lombaerde,Miska Luoto,Camille Meeussen,Sanne Govaert,Thomas Vanneste,Leen Depauw,Jörg Brunet,Sara A. O. Cousins,Cristina Gasperini,Per‐Ola Hedwall,Giovanni Iacopetti,Jonathan Lenoir,Jan Plue,Federico Selvi,Fabien Spicher,Jaime Uria‐Diez,Kris Verheyen,Pieter Vangansbeke,Pieter De Frenne
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41558-023-01744-y
摘要
Macroclimatic changes are impacting ecosystems worldwide. However, a large portion of terrestrial species live under conditions where impacts of macroclimate change are buffered, such as in the shade of trees, and how this buffering impacts future below-canopy biodiversity redistributions at the continental scale is unknown. Here we show that shady forest floors due to dense tree canopies mitigate severe warming impacts on forest biodiversity, while canopy opening amplifies macroclimate change impacts. A cross-continental transplant experiment in five contrasting biogeographical areas combined with experimental heating and irradiation treatments was used to parametize 25-m resolution mechanistic demographic distribution models and project the current and future distributions of 12 common understorey plant species, considering the effects of forest microclimate and forest cover density. These results highlight microclimates and forest density as powerful tools for forest managers and policymakers to shelter forest biodiversity from climate change. The impacts of microclimate on future plant population dynamics are poorly understood. The authors use large-scale transplant climate change experiments to show the contribution of forest microclimates to population dynamics and project the distributions of 12 common understorey plants.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI