Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches

Although climate change is expected to drive tree species toward colder and wetter regions of their distribution, broadscale empirical evidence is lacking. One possibility is that past and present human activities in forests obscure or alter the effects of climate. Here, using data from more than two million monitored trees from 73 widely distributed species, we quantify changes in tree species density within their climatic niches across Northern Hemisphere forests. We observe a reduction in mean density across species, coupled with a tendency toward increasing tree size. However, the direction and magnitude of changes in density exhibit considerable variability between species, influenced by stand development that results from previous stand-level disturbances. Remarkably, when accounting for stand development, our findings show a significant change in density toward cold and wet climatic conditions for 43% of the species, compared to only 14% of species significantly changing their density toward warm and arid conditions in both early- and late-development stands. The observed changes in climate-driven density showed no clear association with species traits related to drought tolerance, recruitment and dispersal capacity, or resource use, nor with the temperature or aridity affiliation of the species, leaving the underlying mechanism uncertain. Forest conservation policies and associated management strategies might want to consider anticipated long-term species range shifts alongside the integration of contemporary within-distribution density changes.

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Main Authors: Astigarraga, Julen, Esquivel-Muelbert, Adriane, Ruiz-Benito, Paloma, Rodríguez-Sánchez, Francisco, Zavala, Miguel A., Vilà-Cabrera, Albert, Schelhaas, Mart Jan, Kunstler, Georges, Woodall, Christopher W., Cienciala, Emil, Dahlgren, Jonas, Govaere, Leen, König, Louis A., Lehtonen, Aleksi, Talarczyk, Andrzej, Liu, Daijun, Pugh, Thomas A.M.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:climate change, climatic sensitivity, forest dynamics, species density, stand development,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/relative-decline-in-density-of-northern-hemisphere-tree-species-i
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6333502024-10-01 Astigarraga, Julen Esquivel-Muelbert, Adriane Ruiz-Benito, Paloma Rodríguez-Sánchez, Francisco Zavala, Miguel A. Vilà-Cabrera, Albert Schelhaas, Mart Jan Kunstler, Georges Woodall, Christopher W. Cienciala, Emil Dahlgren, Jonas Govaere, Leen König, Louis A. Lehtonen, Aleksi Talarczyk, Andrzej Liu, Daijun Pugh, Thomas A.M. Article/Letter to editor Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 121 (2024) 28 ISSN: 0027-8424 Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches 2024 Although climate change is expected to drive tree species toward colder and wetter regions of their distribution, broadscale empirical evidence is lacking. One possibility is that past and present human activities in forests obscure or alter the effects of climate. Here, using data from more than two million monitored trees from 73 widely distributed species, we quantify changes in tree species density within their climatic niches across Northern Hemisphere forests. We observe a reduction in mean density across species, coupled with a tendency toward increasing tree size. However, the direction and magnitude of changes in density exhibit considerable variability between species, influenced by stand development that results from previous stand-level disturbances. Remarkably, when accounting for stand development, our findings show a significant change in density toward cold and wet climatic conditions for 43% of the species, compared to only 14% of species significantly changing their density toward warm and arid conditions in both early- and late-development stands. The observed changes in climate-driven density showed no clear association with species traits related to drought tolerance, recruitment and dispersal capacity, or resource use, nor with the temperature or aridity affiliation of the species, leaving the underlying mechanism uncertain. Forest conservation policies and associated management strategies might want to consider anticipated long-term species range shifts alongside the integration of contemporary within-distribution density changes. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/relative-decline-in-density-of-northern-hemisphere-tree-species-i 10.1073/pnas.2314899121 https://edepot.wur.nl/671488 climate change climatic sensitivity forest dynamics species density stand development https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic climate change
climatic sensitivity
forest dynamics
species density
stand development
climate change
climatic sensitivity
forest dynamics
species density
stand development
spellingShingle climate change
climatic sensitivity
forest dynamics
species density
stand development
climate change
climatic sensitivity
forest dynamics
species density
stand development
Astigarraga, Julen
Esquivel-Muelbert, Adriane
Ruiz-Benito, Paloma
Rodríguez-Sánchez, Francisco
Zavala, Miguel A.
Vilà-Cabrera, Albert
Schelhaas, Mart Jan
Kunstler, Georges
Woodall, Christopher W.
Cienciala, Emil
Dahlgren, Jonas
Govaere, Leen
König, Louis A.
Lehtonen, Aleksi
Talarczyk, Andrzej
Liu, Daijun
Pugh, Thomas A.M.
Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches
description Although climate change is expected to drive tree species toward colder and wetter regions of their distribution, broadscale empirical evidence is lacking. One possibility is that past and present human activities in forests obscure or alter the effects of climate. Here, using data from more than two million monitored trees from 73 widely distributed species, we quantify changes in tree species density within their climatic niches across Northern Hemisphere forests. We observe a reduction in mean density across species, coupled with a tendency toward increasing tree size. However, the direction and magnitude of changes in density exhibit considerable variability between species, influenced by stand development that results from previous stand-level disturbances. Remarkably, when accounting for stand development, our findings show a significant change in density toward cold and wet climatic conditions for 43% of the species, compared to only 14% of species significantly changing their density toward warm and arid conditions in both early- and late-development stands. The observed changes in climate-driven density showed no clear association with species traits related to drought tolerance, recruitment and dispersal capacity, or resource use, nor with the temperature or aridity affiliation of the species, leaving the underlying mechanism uncertain. Forest conservation policies and associated management strategies might want to consider anticipated long-term species range shifts alongside the integration of contemporary within-distribution density changes.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet climate change
climatic sensitivity
forest dynamics
species density
stand development
author Astigarraga, Julen
Esquivel-Muelbert, Adriane
Ruiz-Benito, Paloma
Rodríguez-Sánchez, Francisco
Zavala, Miguel A.
Vilà-Cabrera, Albert
Schelhaas, Mart Jan
Kunstler, Georges
Woodall, Christopher W.
Cienciala, Emil
Dahlgren, Jonas
Govaere, Leen
König, Louis A.
Lehtonen, Aleksi
Talarczyk, Andrzej
Liu, Daijun
Pugh, Thomas A.M.
author_facet Astigarraga, Julen
Esquivel-Muelbert, Adriane
Ruiz-Benito, Paloma
Rodríguez-Sánchez, Francisco
Zavala, Miguel A.
Vilà-Cabrera, Albert
Schelhaas, Mart Jan
Kunstler, Georges
Woodall, Christopher W.
Cienciala, Emil
Dahlgren, Jonas
Govaere, Leen
König, Louis A.
Lehtonen, Aleksi
Talarczyk, Andrzej
Liu, Daijun
Pugh, Thomas A.M.
author_sort Astigarraga, Julen
title Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches
title_short Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches
title_full Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches
title_fullStr Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches
title_full_unstemmed Relative decline in density of Northern Hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches
title_sort relative decline in density of northern hemisphere tree species in warm and arid regions of their climate niches
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/relative-decline-in-density-of-northern-hemisphere-tree-species-i
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