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Climate Change and Forest Biodiversity in the Eastern United States: Insights from Inventory Data

<p>Ecologists have long been interested in the relationships between climate change and forest biodiversity. For centuries, the scientific problems remain understanding the patterns of climate variation, forest geographic distribution, and demographic dynamics. Besides scientific merits, these questions will also help forest managers and policy makers to anticipate how forests respond to global change. This dissertation tackles these problems by using statistical modeling on climate and forest inventory data in the eastern United States.</p><p>In Chapter 1, we ask the question on the observed tree range distributions in response to contemporary climate change in the eastern United States. Tree species are expected to track warming climate by shifting their ranges to higher latitudes or elevations, but current evidence of latitudinal range shifts for suites of species is largely indirect. In response to global warming, offspring of trees are predicted to have ranges extend beyond adults at leading edges and the opposite relationship at trailing edges. Large-scale forest inventory data provides an opportunity to compare present latitudes of seedlings and adult trees at their range limits. Using the USDA Forest Service's Forest Inventory and Analysis data, we directly compared seedling and tree 5th and 95th percentile latitudes for 92 species in 30 longitudinal bands for 43,334 plots across the eastern United States. We further compared these latitudes with 20th century temperature and precipitation change and functional traits, including seed size and seed spread rate. Results suggest that 58.7% of the tree species examined show the pattern expected for a population undergoing range contraction, rather than expansion, at both northern and southern boundaries. Fewer species show a pattern consistent with a northward shift (20.7%) and fewer still with a southward shift (16.3%). Only 4.3% are consistent with expansion at both range limits. When compared with the 20th century climate changes that have occurred at the range boundaries themselves, there is no consistent evidence that population spread is greatest in areas where climate has changed most; nor are patterns related to seed size or dispersal characteristics. The fact that the majority of seedling extreme latitudes are less than those for adult trees may emphasize the lack of evidence for climate-mediated migration, and should increase concerns for the risks posed by climate change.</p><p>In Chapter 2, we ask the question on tree abundance within geographic range responding to climate variation in the eastern United States. Tree species are predicted to track future climate by shifting their geographic distributions, but climate-mediated migrations are not apparent in a recent continental-scale analysis (Chapter 1). To better understand the mechanisms of a possible migration lag, we analyzed relative recruitment patterns by comparing juvenile and adult tree abundances in climate space. One would expect relative recruitment to be higher in cold and dry climates as a result of tree migration with juveniles located further poleward than adults. Alternatively, relative recruitment could be higher in warm and wet climates as a result of higher tree population turnover with increased temperature and precipitation. Using the USDA Forest Service's Forest Inventory and Analysis data at regional scales, we jointly modeled juvenile and adult abundance distributions for 65 tree species in climate space of the eastern United States. We directly compared the optimal climate conditions for juveniles and adults, identified the climates where each species has high relative recruitment, and synthesized relative recruitment patterns across species. Results suggest that for 77% and 83% of the tree species, juveniles have higher optimal temperature and optimal precipitation, respectively, than adults. Across species, the relative recruitment pattern is dominated by relatively more abundant juveniles than adults in warm and wet climates. These different abundance-climate responses through life history are consistent with faster population turnover and inconsistent with the geographic trend of large-scale tree migration. Taken together, this juvenile-adult analysis suggests that tree species might respond to climate change by having faster turnover as dynamics accelerate with longer growing seasons and higher temperatures, before there is evidence of poleward migration at biogeographic scales.</p><p>In Chapter 3, we ask the question on the demographic dynamics of density dependence at the individual tree level in eastern US forests. Density dependence could maintain diversity in forests, but studies disagree on its importance. Part of the disagreement results from the fact that different studies evaluate different responses (per-seedling or per-adult survival or growth) of different stages (seeds, seedlings, or adults) to different inputs (density of seedlings, density or distance to adults). Most studies are conducted on a single site and thus are difficult to generalize. Using USDA Forest Service's Forest Inventory and Analysis data, we analyzed over a million seedling-to-sapling recruitment observations of 50 species for both per-tree (adult) and per-seedling recruitment rates, controlling for climate effects in eastern US forests. We focused on per-tree recruitment as it is most likely to promote diversity at the population level, and it is most likely to be identified in observational or experimental data. To understand the prevalence of density dependence, we quantified the proportion of species with significant positive or negative effects. To understand the strength of density dependence, we determined the magnitude of effects among conspecifics and heterospecifics, and how it changes with overall species abundance. We found that the majority of the 50 species have significant density dependence effects, mostly negative, on both per-tree and per-seedling recruitment. Per-tree recruitment is positively associated with conspecific seedlings, saplings, and heterospecific saplings, negatively associated with heterospecific seedlings, conspecific and heterospecific trees. Per-seedling recruitment is positively associated with conspecific and heterospecific saplings, but negatively associated with conspecific and heterospecific seedlings and trees. Furthermore, for both per-tree and per-seedling recruitment, density dependence effects are stronger for conspecific than heterospecific neighbors. However, the strength of these effects does not vary with species abundance. We conclude that density dependence is pervasive, especially for per-tree recruitment, and its strength among conspecifics and heterospecifics is consistent with the predictions of the Janzen-Connell hypothesis.</p> / Dissertation

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:DUKE/oai:dukespace.lib.duke.edu:10161/8693
Date January 2014
CreatorsZhu, Kai
ContributorsClark, James S.
Source SetsDuke University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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