Literature DB >> 29322582

Large-scale disturbance legacies and the climate sensitivity of primary Picea abies forests.

Jonathan S Schurman1, Volodymyr Trotsiuk1, Radek Bače1, Vojtěch Čada1, Shawn Fraver2, Pavel Janda1, Dominik Kulakowski3, Jana Labusova1, Martin Mikoláš1,4, Thomas A Nagel1,5, Rupert Seidl6, Michal Synek1, Kristýna Svobodová1,7, Oleh Chaskovskyy8, Marius Teodosiu9, Miroslav Svoboda1.   

Abstract

Determining the drivers of shifting forest disturbance rates remains a pressing global change issue. Large-scale forest dynamics are commonly assumed to be climate driven, but appropriately scaled disturbance histories are rarely available to assess how disturbance legacies alter subsequent disturbance rates and the climate sensitivity of disturbance. We compiled multiple tree ring-based disturbance histories from primary Picea abies forest fragments distributed throughout five European landscapes spanning the Bohemian Forest and the Carpathian Mountains. The regional chronology includes 11,595 tree cores, with ring dates spanning the years 1750-2000, collected from 560 inventory plots in 37 stands distributed across a 1,000 km geographic gradient, amounting to the largest disturbance chronology yet constructed in Europe. Decadal disturbance rates varied significantly through time and declined after 1920, resulting in widespread increases in canopy tree age. Approximately 75% of current canopy area recruited prior to 1900. Long-term disturbance patterns were compared to an historical drought reconstruction, and further linked to spatial variation in stand structure and contemporary disturbance patterns derived from LANDSAT imagery. Historically, decadal Palmer drought severity index minima corresponded to higher rates of canopy removal. The severity of contemporary disturbances increased with each stand's estimated time since last major disturbance, increased with mean diameter, and declined with increasing within-stand structural variability. Reconstructed spatial patterns suggest that high small-scale structural variability has historically acted to reduce large-scale susceptibility and climate sensitivity of disturbance. Reduced disturbance rates since 1920, a potential legacy of high 19th century disturbance rates, have contributed to a recent region-wide increase in disturbance susceptibility. Increasingly common high-severity disturbances throughout primary Picea forests of Central Europe should be reinterpreted in light of both legacy effects (resulting in increased susceptibility) and climate change (resulting in increased exposure to extreme events).
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990Picea abieszzm321990; dendroecology; disturbance legacies; historical ecology; primary forest; regional scale; susceptibility

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29322582     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14041

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   13.211


  5 in total

1.  Canopy mortality has doubled in Europe's temperate forests over the last three decades.

Authors:  Cornelius Senf; Dirk Pflugmacher; Yang Zhiqiang; Julius Sebald; Jan Knorn; Mathias Neumann; Patrick Hostert; Rupert Seidl
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-11-26       Impact factor: 17.694

2.  Trade-offs between temporal stability and level of forest ecosystem services provisioning under climate change.

Authors:  Katharina Albrich; Werner Rammer; Dominik Thom; Rupert Seidl
Journal:  Ecol Appl       Date:  2018-09-04       Impact factor: 6.105

3.  Do bark beetle outbreaks amplify or dampen future bark beetle disturbances in Central Europe?

Authors:  Andreas Sommerfeld; Werner Rammer; Marco Heurich; Torben Hilmers; Jörg Müller; Rupert Seidl
Journal:  J Ecol       Date:  2020-10-12       Impact factor: 6.381

4.  Natural disturbance impacts on trade-offs and co-benefits of forest biodiversity and carbon.

Authors:  Martin Mikoláš; Marek Svitok; Radek Bače; Garrett W Meigs; William S Keeton; Heather Keith; Arne Buechling; Volodymyr Trotsiuk; Daniel Kozák; Kurt Bollmann; Krešimir Begovič; Vojtěch Čada; Oleh Chaskovskyy; Dheeraj Ralhan; Martin Dušátko; Matej Ferenčík; Michal Frankovič; Rhiannon Gloor; Jeňýk Hofmeister; Pavel Janda; Ondrej Kameniar; Jana Lábusová; Linda Majdanová; Thomas A Nagel; Jakob Pavlin; Joseph L Pettit; Ruffy Rodrigo; Catalin-Constantin Roibu; Miloš Rydval; Francesco M Sabatini; Jonathan Schurman; Michal Synek; Ondřej Vostarek; Veronika Zemlerová; Miroslav Svoboda
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2021-10-20       Impact factor: 5.349

5.  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

  5 in total

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