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Modeling Tree Species Distribution and Dynamics Under a Changing Climate, Natural Disturbances, and Harvest Alternatives in the Southern United States

Forests in the southern United States with diverse forest ownership entities are facing threats associated with climate change and natural disturbances. This study represented the relationship between climate and species dominance, predicted future species distribution probability under a changing climate, and projected forest dynamics under ownership-based management regimes. Correlative statistics and mechanistic modeling approaches are implemented. Temporal scale includes the recent past 40 years and the future 60 years; spatial scale downscaled from southern United States to the coastal region of the northern Gulf of Mexico. In the southern United States, dominance of four major pine species experienced shifts from 1970 to 2000; quantile regression models built on the relationships among pine dominance and climatic variables can be used to predict future southern pine dominance. Furthermore, multiple climate envelope models (CEMs) were constructed for nineteen native and one invasive tree species (Chinese tallow, Triadica sebifera) to predict species establishment probabilities (SEPs) on the various land types from 2010 to 2070. CEMs achieved both predictive consistency and ecological conformity in estimating SEPs. Chinese tallow was predicted to have the highest invasionability in longleaf/slash pine and oak/gum/cypress forests during the next 60 years. Forest dynamics, in the coastal region, was projected by linking CEMs and forest landscape model (LANDIS) to evaluate ownership-based management regimes under climate change and natural disturbances. The dominance of forest species will diminish due to climate change and natural disturbances at both spatial scales—in the coastal region and non-industrial private forest (NIPF). No management on NIPF land was predicted to substantially increase the ratio of occupancy area between pines and oaks, but moderate and intensive management regimes were not significantly different. Pines are expected to be more resistant than oaks by maintaining stable age structures, which matched the forest inventory records. Overall, this study projected a future of southern forests on climate-species relationship, invasion risks, and forest community dynamics under multiple scenarios in the United States. Such knowledge could assist forest managers and landowners in foreseeing the future and making effective management prescriptions to mitigate potential threats.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:MSSTATE/oai:scholarsjunction.msstate.edu:td-4159
Date14 August 2015
CreatorsSui, Zhen
PublisherScholars Junction
Source SetsMississippi State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceTheses and Dissertations

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