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201212Sep19:15

For­est mor­tal­ity and cli­mate change: The big picture

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 12 Sep­tem­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 05 Decem­ber 2012
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Dead forestOver the past two decades, exten­sive for­est death trig­gered by hot and dry cli­matic con­di­tions has been doc­u­mented on every con­ti­nent except Antarc­tica. For­est mor­tal­ity due to drought and heat stress is expected to increase due to cli­mate change. Although research has focused on iso­lated inci­dents of for­est mor­tal­ity, lit­tle is known about the poten­tial effects of wide­spread for­est die-​offs. A new analy­sis of the cur­rent lit­er­a­ture on this topic by Carnegie’s William and Lean­der Anderegg is pub­lished Sep­tem­ber 9 in Nature Cli­mate Change.

Along with co-​author Jef­frey Kane of North­ern Ari­zona Uni­ver­sity, the Andereggs exam­ined papers deal­ing with dif­fer­ent aspects of for­est die-​off events from stud­ies all over the world. They divided their find­ings into the effects on a for­est com­mu­nity of trees and other species; on ecosys­tem processes as a whole; on ser­vices forests pro­vide to humans; and on the climate.

This study pro­vides a state-​of-​the-​art overview of the many ben­e­fits forests pro­vide to humans, from water purifi­ca­tion to cli­mate reg­u­la­tion. Many of these roles can be dis­rupted by the wide­spread tree mor­tal­ity expected with cli­mate change
William Anderegg »

They found that heat and drought, includ­ing drought-​related insect infes­ta­tion, can dis­pro­por­tion­ately affect some species of trees, or can hit cer­tain ages or sizes of trees par­tic­u­larly hard. This can result in long-​term shifts in an area’s dom­i­nant species, with the poten­tial to trig­ger a tran­si­tion into a dif­fer­ent ecosys­tem, such as grass­land. It can also impact the under­story — the layer of veg­e­ta­tion under the tree­tops — as well as organ­isms liv­ing in the soil. More research on for­est com­mu­nity impacts is needed, par­tic­u­larly on the tra­jec­to­ries of regrowth after for­est die-​off.

From an ecosys­tem per­spec­tive, for­est die-​off will also likely affect hydro­log­i­cal processes and nutri­ent cycles. Depend­ing on the type of for­est, soil mois­ture could be increased by the lack of tree-​top inter­cep­tion of rain­fall or decreased by evap­o­ra­tion due to more sun and wind expo­sure. Debris from fallen trees could also increase a forest’s fire risk.

Forests also have an effect on the cli­mate as a whole. Forests play an impor­tant role in deter­min­ing the amount of heat and light that is reflected from the Earth and into space and in tak­ing up car­bon diox­ide from the atmos­phere. On one hand, for­est mor­tal­ity increases the reflec­tion of the sun’s energy back into space, thus pro­vid­ing a cool­ing effect. But on the other hand, the decom­po­si­tion of fallen trees releases car­bon into the atmos­phere, thus pro­duc­ing a warm­ing effect. Over­all, whether for­est die-​offs result in local cool­ing or warm­ing is expected to depend on the type of for­est, the lat­i­tude, the amount of snow cover, and other com­plex ecosys­tem factors.

Mass tree mor­tal­ity would likely cause sub­stan­tial losses to the tim­ber indus­try, even if saplings and seedlings were unaf­fected. Lit­tle research has been con­ducted on other types of for­est prod­ucts that humans use, such as fruit or nuts, but there would pre­sum­ably be changes in those sec­tors as well. Recent research has exam­ined other ser­vices pro­vided by forests which would likely be affected by die-​off, such as declines in real-​estate prop­erty val­ues fol­low­ing wide­spread tree mortality.

Over­all, the analy­sis found that although there are many recent advances in under­stand­ing the effects of severe for­est die-​off, many crit­i­cal research gaps remain. These gaps are espe­cially crit­i­cal in light of increas­ing for­est die-​off with cli­mate change. One urgent gap is how this summer’s US-​wide severe drought might affect forests. William Anderegg is help­ing to tackle this ques­tion by spear­head­ing a project involv­ing dozens of research groups from around the coun­try (see the Drought Open-​Source Ecol­ogy project for details).

The var­ied nature of the con­se­quences of for­est mor­tal­ity means that we need a mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary approach going for­ward, includ­ing ecol­o­gists, bio­geo­chemists, hydrol­o­gists, econ­o­mists, social sci­en­tists, and cli­mate sci­en­tists. A bet­ter under­stand­ing of for­est die-​off in response to cli­mate change can inform for­est man­age­ment, busi­ness deci­sions, and policy
(William Anderegg)

(Source: Carnegie Insti­tu­tion for Sci­ence, 10.09.2012)

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