Literature DB >> 29105233

Simulating the recent impacts of multiple biotic disturbances on forest carbon cycling across the United States.

Markus Kautz1, Peter Anthoni1, Arjan J H Meddens2, Thomas A M Pugh1,3, Almut Arneth1.   

Abstract

Biotic disturbances (BDs, for example, insects, pathogens, and wildlife herbivory) substantially affect boreal and temperate forest ecosystems globally. However, accurate impact assessments comprising larger spatial scales are lacking to date although these are critically needed given the expected disturbance intensification under a warming climate. Hence, our quantitative knowledge on current and future BD impacts, for example, on forest carbon (C) cycling, is strongly limited. We extended a dynamic global vegetation model to simulate ecosystem response to prescribed tree mortality and defoliation due to multiple biotic agents across United States forests during the period 1997-2015, and quantified the BD-induced vegetation C loss, that is, C fluxes from live vegetation to dead organic matter pools. Annual disturbance fractions separated by BD type (tree mortality and defoliation) and agent (bark beetles, defoliator insects, other insects, pathogens, and other biotic agents) were calculated at 0.5° resolution from aerial-surveyed data and applied within the model. Simulated BD-induced C fluxes totaled 251.6 Mt C (annual mean: 13.2 Mt C year-1 , SD ±7.3 Mt C year-1 between years) across the study domain, to which tree mortality contributed 95% and defoliation 5%. Among BD agents, bark beetles caused most C fluxes (61%), and total insect-induced C fluxes were about five times larger compared to non-insect agents, for example, pathogens and wildlife. Our findings further demonstrate that BD-induced C cycle impacts (i) displayed high spatio-temporal variability, (ii) were dominated by different agents across BD types and regions, and (iii) were comparable in magnitude to fire-induced impacts. This study provides the first ecosystem model-based assessment of BD-induced impacts on forest C cycling at the continental scale and going beyond single agent-host systems, thus allowing for comparisons across regions, BD types, and agents. Ultimately, a perspective on the potential and limitations of a more process-based incorporation of multiple BDs in ecosystem models is offered.
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990DGVMzzm321990; IDS data; LPJ-GUESS; carbon flux; defoliation; disturbance fraction; ecosystem model; insects; pathogens; tree mortality

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29105233     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13974

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


  2 in total

1.  Distinguishing Abrupt and Gradual Forest Disturbances With MODIS-Based Phenological Anomaly Series.

Authors:  Anne Gnilke; Tanja G M Sanders
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-05-23       Impact factor: 6.627

2.  Patterns and drivers of recent disturbances across the temperate forest biome.

Authors:  Andreas Sommerfeld; Cornelius Senf; Brian Buma; Anthony W D'Amato; Tiphaine Després; Ignacio Díaz-Hormazábal; Shawn Fraver; Lee E Frelich; Álvaro G Gutiérrez; Sarah J Hart; Brian J Harvey; Hong S He; Tomáš Hlásny; Andrés Holz; Thomas Kitzberger; Dominik Kulakowski; David Lindenmayer; Akira S Mori; Jörg Müller; Juan Paritsis; George L W Perry; Scott L Stephens; Miroslav Svoboda; Monica G Turner; Thomas T Veblen; Rupert Seidl
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-10-19       Impact factor: 17.694

  2 in total

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