USDA Forest Service, International Institute of Tropical Forestry, Río Piedras, Puerto Rico, United States of America.
USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station Fort Collins, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2023 Mar 15;18(3):e0280322. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0280322. eCollection 2023.
Uncertainties about controls on tree mortality make forest responses to land-use and climate change difficult to predict. We tracked biomass of tree functional groups in tropical forest inventories across Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and with random forests we ranked 86 potential predictors of small tree survival (young or mature stems 2.5-12.6 cm diameter at breast height). Forests span dry to cloud forests, range in age, geology and past land use and experienced severe drought and storms. When excluding species as a predictor, top predictors are tree crown ratio and height, two to three species traits and stand to regional factors reflecting local disturbance and the system state (widespread recovery, drought, hurricanes). Native species, and species with denser wood, taller maximum height, or medium typical height survive longer, but short trees and species survive hurricanes better. Trees survive longer in older stands and with less disturbed canopies, harsher geoclimates (dry, edaphically dry, e.g., serpentine substrates, and highest-elevation cloud forest), or in intervals removed from hurricanes. Satellite image phenology and bands, even from past decades, are top predictors, being sensitive to vegetation type and disturbance. Covariation between stand-level species traits and geoclimate, disturbance and neighboring species types may explain why most neighbor variables, including introduced vs. native species, had low or no importance, despite univariate correlations with survival. As forests recovered from a hurricane in 1998 and earlier deforestation, small trees of introduced species, which on average have lighter wood, died at twice the rate of natives. After hurricanes in 2017, the total biomass of trees ≥12.7 cm dbh of the introduced species Spathodea campanulata spiked, suggesting that more frequent hurricanes might perpetuate this light-wooded species commonness. If hurricane recovery favors light-wooded species while drought favors others, climate change influences on forest composition and ecosystem services may depend on the frequency and severity of extreme climate events.
树木死亡率的控制因素存在不确定性,使得森林对土地利用和气候变化的响应难以预测。我们跟踪了波多黎各和美属维尔京群岛热带森林清查中树木功能群的生物量,并使用随机森林对 86 个可能影响小树存活(胸径 2.5-12.6 厘米的幼树或成熟树)的预测因子进行了排序。这些森林跨越了干旱到云雾森林,涵盖了不同的年龄、地质和过去的土地利用情况,并经历了严重的干旱和风暴。在排除物种作为预测因子的情况下,顶级预测因子是树冠比和高度,以及两到三个物种特征和反映当地干扰和系统状态(广泛恢复、干旱、飓风)的区域因素。本地物种和木材密度更高、最大高度更高或典型高度中等的物种存活时间更长,但矮树和物种在飓风中存活得更好。树木在较老的林分中、树冠干扰较小、气候条件更恶劣(干旱、土壤干燥,例如蛇纹岩土和高海拔云雾森林)、或与飓风间隔较远的情况下存活时间更长。卫星图像物候和波段,即使是过去几十年的数据,也是顶级预测因子,对植被类型和干扰敏感。林分水平的物种特征与地理气候、干扰和相邻物种类型之间的共变可能解释了为什么大多数邻居变量,包括外来种与本地种,尽管与存活有单变量相关性,但重要性较低或为零。随着森林从 1998 年的飓风和早期的森林砍伐中恢复,平均木材较轻的外来树种的小树死亡率是本地树种的两倍。在 2017 年的飓风中,外来树种 Spathodea campanulata 的 12.7 厘米 dbh 以上树木的总生物量飙升,这表明更频繁的飓风可能会使这种轻木物种的普遍性永久化。如果飓风恢复有利于轻木树种,而干旱有利于其他树种,那么气候变化对森林组成和生态系统服务的影响可能取决于极端气候事件的频率和严重程度。