School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, The University of Melbourne, 4 Water Street, Creswick, VIC 3363, Australia.
School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, The University of Melbourne, 4 Water Street, Creswick, VIC 3363, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 Nov 10;690:991-1004. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.07.024. Epub 2019 Jul 4.
Forests are an important global carbon sink but their responses to climate change are uncertain. Tree stems, as the predominant carbon pool, represent net productivity in temperate eucalypt forests but the drivers of growth in these evergreen forests remain poorly understood partly because the dominant tree species lack distinct growth rings. Disentangling eucalypt species' growth responses to climate from other factors, such as competition and disturbances like fire, remains challenging due to a lack of long-term growth data. We measured monthly stem-diameter changes (as basal area increment, BAI) of two co-occurring dominant eucalypts from different sub-genera (Eucalyptus obliqua and E. rubida) over nearly four years. Our study included seven sites in a natural temperate forest of south-eastern Australia, and we used linear mixed-effects models to examine the relative importance to monthly BAI of species, monthly climate variables (temperature and rainfall), inter-tree competition, and recent fire history (long-unburnt, prescribed fire, wildfire). Monthly BAI peaked in spring and autumn and was significantly different between species during spring and summer. BAI variation was most clearly associated with temperature, increasing in hyperbolic response curves up to maximum mean temperatures of ~ 15-17 °C and thereafter decreasing. Temperature optima for maximum monthly BAI were 1 to 2 °C warmer for E. rubida than E. obliqua. While less important than temperature, rainfall, particularly autumn rainfall, also helped explain patterns in monthly BAI, with inter-tree competition and recent fire history of comparatively minor importance. Our study provides the first comprehensive field-based evidence of different growth niches for eucalypts from different subgenera in natural temperate mixed forests. It highlights the importance of intra-annual climate to understanding productivity variation in temperate evergreen forests and provides insights into the mechanisms underpinning the successful co-existence of different tree species as well as their relative vulnerabilities to changing climates.
森林是重要的全球碳汇,但它们对气候变化的响应仍不确定。树干作为主要的碳库,代表着温带桉树森林的净生产力,但这些常绿森林的生长驱动因素仍知之甚少,部分原因是优势树种缺乏明显的生长年轮。由于缺乏长期的生长数据,要将桉树物种的生长对气候的响应与其他因素(如竞争和火灾等干扰)区分开来仍然具有挑战性。我们测量了近四年中两种不同亚属(Eucalyptus obliqua 和 E. rubida)的两种共生优势桉树的每月树干直径变化(作为基面积增量,BAI)。我们的研究包括澳大利亚东南部一个自然温带森林的七个地点,我们使用线性混合效应模型来检验每月 BAI 与物种、每月气候变量(温度和降雨量)、树木间竞争和最近的火灾历史(长时间未燃烧、计划火灾、野火)的相对重要性。每月 BAI 在春季和秋季达到峰值,在春季和夏季,物种之间存在显著差异。BAI 变化与温度最密切相关,在双曲线响应曲线中,温度上升到最高平均温度约 15-17°C 时达到峰值,之后下降。E. rubida 的最大月 BAI 温度最优值比 E. obliqua 高 1 到 2°C。虽然不如温度重要,但降雨,特别是秋季降雨,也有助于解释每月 BAI 的模式,树木间竞争和最近的火灾历史则相对不重要。本研究首次提供了来自不同亚属的桉树在自然温带混合森林中不同生长小生境的综合现场证据。它强调了年内气候对理解温带常绿森林生产力变化的重要性,并为理解不同树种成功共存的机制以及它们对气候变化的相对脆弱性提供了线索。