Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society, College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Nov;28(21):6180-6193. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16353. Epub 2022 Sep 6.
Climate change is contributing to biodiversity redistributions and species declines. However, cooler microclimate conditions provided by old-growth forest structures compared with surrounding open or younger forests have been hypothesized to provide thermal refugia for species that are sensitive to climate warming and dampen the negative effects of warming on population trends of animals (i.e., the microclimate buffering hypothesis). In addition to thermal refugia, the compositional and structural diversity of old-growth forest vegetation itself may provide resources to species that are less available in forests with simpler structure (i.e., the insurance hypothesis). We used 8 years of breeding bird abundance data from a forested watershed, accompanied with sub-canopy temperature data, and ground- and LiDAR-based vegetation data to test these hypotheses and identify factors influencing bird population changes from 2011 to 2018. After accounting for imperfect detection, we found that for 5 of 20 bird species analyzed, abundance trends tended to be less negative or neutral at sites with cooler microclimates, which supports the microclimate buffering hypothesis. Negative effects of warming on two species were also reduced in locations with greater forest compositional diversity supporting the insurance hypothesis. We provide the first empirical evidence that complex forest structure and vegetation diversity confer microclimatic advantages to some animal populations in the face of climate change. Conservation of old-growth forests, or their characteristics in managed forests, could help slow the negative effects of climate warming on some breeding bird populations via microclimate buffering and possibly insurance effects.
气候变化导致生物多样性重新分布和物种减少。然而,与周围开阔或年轻的森林相比,老龄林结构提供的较凉爽的小气候条件被假设为对气候变暖敏感的物种提供了热避难所,并减轻了变暖对动物种群趋势的负面影响(即小气候缓冲假说)。除了热避难所以外,老龄林植被本身的组成和结构多样性也可能为在结构较简单的森林中较少可用的物种提供资源(即保险假说)。我们使用了一个森林流域 8 年的繁殖鸟类丰富度数据,同时还有冠层下温度数据以及基于地面和 LiDAR 的植被数据,以检验这些假说,并确定 2011 年至 2018 年鸟类种群变化的影响因素。在考虑到不完全检测后,我们发现,在所分析的 20 种鸟类中的 5 种中,在较凉爽的小气候条件下,鸟类数量的趋势往往不那么负面或中性,这支持了小气候缓冲假说。在具有更高森林组成多样性的地方,变暖对两种鸟类的负面影响也减少了,这支持了保险假说。我们首次提供了经验证据,表明在气候变化面前,复杂的森林结构和植被多样性为一些动物种群带来了小气候优势。保护老龄林或其在管理森林中的特征,可能有助于通过小气候缓冲和可能的保险效应减缓气候变暖对一些繁殖鸟类种群的负面影响。