| Literature DB >> 33118242 |
Eric B Gorgens1, Matheus H Nunes2, Tobias Jackson3, David Coomes3, Michael Keller4, Cristiano R Reis5, Ruben Valbuena6, Jacqueline Rosette7, Danilo R A de Almeida5, Bruno Gimenez8, Roberta Cantinho9, Alline Z Motta1, Mauro Assis10, Francisca R de Souza Pereira10, Gustavo Spanner11, Niro Higuchi11, Jean Pierre Ometto10.
Abstract
Tall trees are key drivers of ecosystem processes in tropical forest, but the controls on the distribution of the very tallest trees remain poorly understood. The recent discovery of grove of giant trees over 80 meters tall in the Amazon forest requires a reevaluation of current thinking. We used high-resolution airborne laser surveys to measure canopy height across 282,750 ha of old-growth and second-growth forests randomly sampling the entire Brazilian Amazon. We investigated how resources and disturbances shape the maximum height distribution across the Brazilian Amazon through the relations between the occurrence of giant trees and environmental factors. Common drivers of height development are fundamentally different from those influencing the occurrence of giant trees. We found that changes in wind and light availability drive giant tree distribution as much as precipitation and temperature, together shaping the forest structure of the Brazilian Amazon. The location of giant trees should be carefully considered by policymakers when identifying important hot spots for the conservation of biodiversity in the Amazon.Keywords: distribution; dominant tree; envelope model; giant trees; height; modeling; random forest; sentinel tree; tall tree
Year: 2020 PMID: 33118242 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863