Instituto de Investigaciones para el Desarrollo Forestal (INDEFOR), Universidad de Los Andes, Mérida, Venezuela.
School of Environmental and Forest Sciences (SEFS), University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United of States America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 21;13(6):e0198489. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198489. eCollection 2018.
Using data from 50 long-term permanent plots from across Venezuelan forests in northern South America, we explored large-scale patterns of stem turnover, aboveground biomass (AGB) and woody productivity (AGWP), and the relationships between them and with potential climatic drivers. We used principal component analysis coupled with generalized least squares models to analyze the relationship between climate, forest structure and stem dynamics. Two major axes associated with orthogonal temperature and moisture gradients effectively described more than 90% of the environmental variability in the dataset. Average turnover was 1.91 ± 0.10% year-1 with mortality and recruitment being almost identical, and close to average rates for other mature tropical forests. Turnover rates were significantly different among regions (p < 0.001), with the lowland forests in Western alluvial plains being the most dynamic, and Guiana Shield forests showing the lowest turnover rates. We found a weak positive relationship between AGB and AGWP, with Guiana Shield forests having the highest values for both variables (204.8 ± 14.3 Mg C ha-1 and 3.27 ± 0.27 Mg C ha-1 year-1 respectively), but AGB was much more strongly and negatively related to stem turnover. Our data suggest that moisture is a key driver of turnover, with longer dry seasons favoring greater rates of tree turnover and thus lower biomass, having important implications in the context of climate change, given the increases in drought frequency in many tropical forests. Regional variation in AGWP among Venezuelan forests strongly reflects the effects of climate, with greatest woody productivity where both precipitation and temperatures are high. Overall, forests in wet, low elevation sites and with slow turnover stored the greatest amounts of biomass. Although faster stand dynamics are closely associated with lower carbon storage, stem-level turnover rates and woody productivity did not show any correlation, indicating that stem dynamics and carbon dynamics are largely decoupled from one another.
利用来自南美洲北部委内瑞拉森林的 50 个长期永久样地的数据,我们探讨了茎干周转、地上生物量(AGB)和木质生产力(AGWP)的大尺度格局,以及它们与潜在气候驱动因素之间的关系。我们使用主成分分析结合广义最小二乘模型来分析气候、森林结构和茎干动态之间的关系。与正交温度和湿度梯度相关的两个主要轴有效地描述了数据集内超过 90%的环境变异性。平均周转率为 1.91±0.10%年-1,死亡率和补充率几乎相同,接近其他成熟热带森林的平均周转率。周转率在不同地区(p<0.001)存在显著差异,西部冲积平原的低地森林最为活跃,圭亚那盾地的森林周转率最低。我们发现 AGB 和 AGWP 之间存在弱正相关,圭亚那盾地的这两个变量值最高(分别为 204.8±14.3 Mg C ha-1和 3.27±0.27 Mg C ha-1年-1),但 AGB 与茎干周转的关系要强得多且呈负相关。我们的数据表明,水分是周转的关键驱动因素,较长的旱季有利于树木周转率的提高,从而导致生物量的降低,这在许多热带森林中干旱频率增加的背景下具有重要意义。委内瑞拉森林之间的 AGWP 区域差异强烈反映了气候的影响,降水和温度都高的地区木质生产力最高。总体而言,在潮湿、低海拔的地点和周转缓慢的森林中储存了最大量的生物量。虽然更快的林分动态与更低的碳储量密切相关,但茎干水平的周转率和木质生产力之间没有任何相关性,这表明茎干动态和碳动态在很大程度上彼此分离。