Literature DB >> 28135022

Structural overshoot of tree growth with climate variability and the global spectrum of drought-induced forest dieback.

Alistair S Jump1,2, Paloma Ruiz-Benito1,3, Sarah Greenwood1, Craig D Allen4, Thomas Kitzberger5, Rod Fensham6,7, Jordi Martínez-Vilalta2,8, Francisco Lloret2,8.   

Abstract

Ongoing climate change poses significant threats to plant function and distribution. Increased temperatures and altered precipitation regimes amplify drought frequency and intensity, elevating plant stress and mortality. Large-scale forest mortality events will have far-reaching impacts on carbon and hydrological cycling, biodiversity, and ecosystem services. However, biogeographical theory and global vegetation models poorly represent recent forest die-off patterns. Furthermore, as trees are sessile and long-lived, their responses to climate extremes are substantially dependent on historical factors. We show that periods of favourable climatic and management conditions that facilitate abundant tree growth can lead to structural overshoot of aboveground tree biomass due to a subsequent temporal mismatch between water demand and availability. When environmental favourability declines, increases in water and temperature stress that are protracted, rapid, or both, drive a gradient of tree structural responses that can modify forest self-thinning relationships. Responses ranging from premature leaf senescence and partial canopy dieback to whole-tree mortality reduce canopy leaf area during the stress period and for a lagged recovery window thereafter. Such temporal mismatches of water requirements from availability can occur at local to regional scales throughout a species geographical range. As climate change projections predict large future fluctuations in both wet and dry conditions, we expect forests to become increasingly structurally mismatched to water availability and thus overbuilt during more stressful episodes. By accounting for the historical context of biomass development, our approach can explain previously problematic aspects of large-scale forest mortality, such as why it can occur throughout the range of a species and yet still be locally highly variable, and why some events seem readily attributable to an ongoing drought while others do not. This refined understanding can facilitate better projections of structural overshoot responses, enabling improved prediction of changes in forest distribution and function from regional to global scales.
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  climate change; drought; extreme events; forest dynamics; mortality

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28135022     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13636

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  20 in total

1.  Water-limited vegetated ecosystems driven by stochastic rainfall: feedbacks and bimodality.

Authors:  Benjamin E Schaffer; Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe
Journal:  Proc Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2018-06-20       Impact factor: 2.704

2.  Increasing atmospheric humidity and CO2 concentration alleviate forest mortality risk.

Authors:  Yanlan Liu; Anthony J Parolari; Mukesh Kumar; Cheng-Wei Huang; Gabriel G Katul; Amilcare Porporato
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-08-28       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Higher tree diversity is linked to higher tree mortality.

Authors:  Eric B Searle; Han Y H Chen; Alain Paquette
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-05-02       Impact factor: 12.779

4.  Non-structural carbohydrate dynamics associated with drought-induced die-off in woody species of a shrubland community.

Authors:  Francisco Lloret; Gerard Sapes; Teresa Rosas; Lucía Galiano; Sandra Saura-Mas; Anna Sala; Jordi Martínez-Vilalta
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2018-06-08       Impact factor: 4.357

5.  Early-Warning Signals of Individual Tree Mortality Based on Annual Radial Growth.

Authors:  Maxime Cailleret; Vasilis Dakos; Steven Jansen; Elisabeth M R Robert; Tuomas Aakala; Mariano M Amoroso; Joe A Antos; Christof Bigler; Harald Bugmann; Marco Caccianaga; Jesus-Julio Camarero; Paolo Cherubini; Marie R Coyea; Katarina Čufar; Adrian J Das; Hendrik Davi; Guillermo Gea-Izquierdo; Sten Gillner; Laurel J Haavik; Henrik Hartmann; Ana-Maria Hereş; Kevin R Hultine; Pavel Janda; Jeffrey M Kane; Viachelsav I Kharuk; Thomas Kitzberger; Tamir Klein; Tom Levanic; Juan-Carlos Linares; Fabio Lombardi; Harri Mäkinen; Ilona Mészáros; Juha M Metsaranta; Walter Oberhuber; Andreas Papadopoulos; Any Mary Petritan; Brigitte Rohner; Gabriel Sangüesa-Barreda; Jeremy M Smith; Amanda B Stan; Dejan B Stojanovic; Maria-Laura Suarez; Miroslav Svoboda; Volodymyr Trotsiuk; Ricardo Villalba; Alana R Westwood; Peter H Wyckoff; Jordi Martínez-Vilalta
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2019-01-08       Impact factor: 5.753

6.  Determinants of legacy effects in pine trees - implications from an irrigation-stop experiment.

Authors:  Roman Zweifel; Sophia Etzold; Frank Sterck; Arthur Gessler; Tommaso Anfodillo; Maurizio Mencuccini; Georg von Arx; Martina Lazzarin; Matthias Haeni; Linda Feichtinger; Katrin Meusburger; Simon Knuesel; Lorenz Walthert; Yann Salmon; Arun K Bose; Leonie Schoenbeck; Christian Hug; Nicolas De Girardi; Arnaud Giuggiola; Marcus Schaub; Andreas Rigling
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2020-05-09       Impact factor: 10.151

7.  Assisted migration across fixed seed zones detects adaptation lags in two major North American tree species.

Authors:  Julie R Etterson; Meredith W Cornett; Mark A White; Laura C Kavajecz
Journal:  Ecol Appl       Date:  2020-03-19       Impact factor: 4.657

8.  Die hard: timberline conifers survive annual winter embolism.

Authors:  Stefan Mayr; Peter Schmid; Barbara Beikircher; Feng Feng; Eric Badel
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2019-11-23       Impact factor: 10.151

9.  Pervasive decreases in living vegetation carbon turnover time across forest climate zones.

Authors:  Kailiang Yu; William K Smith; Anna T Trugman; Richard Condit; Stephen P Hubbell; Jordi Sardans; Changhui Peng; Kai Zhu; Josep Peñuelas; Maxime Cailleret; Tom Levanic; Arthur Gessler; Marcus Schaub; Marco Ferretti; William R L Anderegg
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-11-18       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Climate reverses directionality in the richness-abundance relationship across the World's main forest biomes.

Authors:  Jaime Madrigal-González; Joaquín Calatayud; Juan A Ballesteros-Cánovas; Adrián Escudero; Luis Cayuela; Marta Rueda; Paloma Ruiz-Benito; Asier Herrero; Cristina Aponte; Rodrigo Sagardia; Andrew J Plumptre; Sylvain Dupire; Carlos I Espinosa; Olga Tutubalina; Moe Myint; Luciano Pataro; Jerome López-Sáez; Manuel J Macía; Meinrad Abegg; Miguel A Zavala; Adolfo Quesada-Román; Mauricio Vega-Araya; Elena Golubeva; Yuliya Timokhina; Markus Stoffel
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-11-06       Impact factor: 14.919

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