Forest Ecology and Restoration Group, Department of Life Sciences, Universidad de Alcalá, Campus Universitario, Alcalá de Henares, 28871, Spain.
Instituto Pirenaico de Ecología (IPE-CSIC), Avenida Montañana, 1005, Zaragoza, 50192, Spain.
Ecol Appl. 2018 Jan;28(1):95-105. doi: 10.1002/eap.1631. Epub 2017 Dec 6.
Climate change in the Mediterranean, associated with warmer temperatures and more frequent droughts, is expected to impact forest productivity and the functioning of forests ecosystems as carbon reservoirs in the region. Climate warming can positively affect forest growth by extending the growing season, whereas increasing summer drought generally reduces forest productivity and may cause growth decline, trigger dieback, hamper regeneration, and increase mortality. Forest management could potentially counteract such negative effects by reducing stand density and thereby competition for water. The effectiveness of such interventions, however, has so far mostly been evaluated for short time periods at the tree and stand levels, which limits our confidence regarding the efficacy of thinning interventions over longer time scales under the complex interplay between climate, stand structure, and forest management. In this study, we use a century-long historical data set to assess the effects of climate and management on forest productivity. We consider rear-edge Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) populations covering continental and Mediterranean conditions along an altitudinal gradient in Central Spain. We use linear mixed-effects models to disentangle the effects of altitude, climate, and stand volume on forest growth and ingrowth (recruitment and young trees' growth). We find that warming tends to benefit these tree populations, warmer winter temperature has a significant positive effect on both forest growth and ingrowth, and the effect is more pronounced at low elevations. However, drought conditions severely reduce growth and ingrowth, in particular when competition (stand volume) is high. We conclude that summer droughts are the main threat to Scots pine populations in the region, and that a reduction of stand volume can partially mitigate the negative impacts of more arid conditions. Mitigation and adaptation measures could therefore manage stand structure to adopt for the anticipated impacts of climate change in Mediterranean forest ecosystems.
地中海的气候变化,包括温度升高和干旱频发,预计将影响该地区森林生产力和作为碳库的森林生态系统功能。气候变暖可以通过延长生长季来积极影响森林生长,而夏季干旱增加通常会降低森林生产力,并可能导致生长衰退、引发衰退、阻碍再生和增加死亡率。森林管理可以通过降低林分密度从而减少对水的竞争,从而潜在地抵消这些负面影响。然而,到目前为止,这种干预措施的有效性主要在树木和林分水平上进行了短期评估,这限制了我们对在更为复杂的气候、林分结构和森林管理相互作用下,在更长时间尺度上疏伐干预措施有效性的信心。在这项研究中,我们使用了一个长达一个世纪的历史数据集来评估气候和管理对森林生产力的影响。我们考虑了在西班牙中部沿海拔梯度的大陆性和地中海性条件下的后缘欧洲赤松(Pinus sylvestris)种群。我们使用线性混合效应模型来分离海拔、气候和林分体积对森林生长和更新(新树的生长和幼苗的生长)的影响。我们发现,变暖趋势有利于这些树木种群,温暖的冬季温度对森林生长和更新都有显著的积极影响,而且这种影响在低海拔地区更为明显。然而,干旱条件严重降低了生长和更新,特别是在竞争(林分体积)较高的情况下。我们得出结论,夏季干旱是该地区欧洲赤松种群的主要威胁,而减少林分体积可以部分减轻更为干旱条件的负面影响。因此,缓解和适应措施可以管理林分结构,以适应地中海森林生态系统中气候变化的预期影响。