Yan Yuchao, Hong Songbai, Chen Anping, Peñuelas Josep, Allen Craig D, Hammond William M, Munson Seth M, Myneni Ranga B, Piao Shilong
Institute of Carbon Neutrality, Sino-French Institute for Earth System Science, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China.
Guangdong Key Laboratory for Urbanization and Geo-Simulation, School of Geography and Planning, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China.
Nat Plants. 2025 Apr;11(4):731-742. doi: 10.1038/s41477-025-01948-4. Epub 2025 Apr 18.
Climate-driven forest mortality events have been extensively observed in recent decades, prompting the question of how quickly these affected forests can recover their functionality following such events. Here we assessed forest recovery in vegetation greenness (normalized difference vegetation index) and canopy water content (normalized difference infrared index) for 1,699 well-documented forest mortality events across 1,600 sites worldwide. By analysing 158,427 Landsat surface reflectance images sampled from these sites, we provided a global assessment on the time required for impacted forests to return to their pre-mortality state (recovery time). Our findings reveal a consistent decline in global forest recovery rate over the past decades indicated by both greenness and canopy water content. This decline is particularly noticeable since the 1990s. Further analysis on underlying mechanisms suggests that this reduction in global forest recovery rates is primarily associated with rising temperatures and increased water scarcity, while the escalation in the severity of forest mortality contributes only partially to this reduction. Moreover, our global-scale analysis reveals that the recovery of forest canopy water content lags significantly behind that of vegetation greenness, implying that vegetation indices based solely on greenness can overestimate post-mortality recovery rates globally. Our findings underscore the increasing vulnerability of forest ecosystems to future warming and water insufficiency, accentuating the need to prioritize forest conservation and restoration as an integral component of efforts to mitigate climate change impacts.
近几十年来,气候驱动的森林死亡事件已被广泛观测到,这引发了一个问题:这些受影响的森林在这类事件发生后恢复其功能的速度有多快。在此,我们评估了全球1600个地点1699起有详细记录的森林死亡事件中植被绿度(归一化植被指数)和冠层含水量(归一化差值红外指数)的森林恢复情况。通过分析从这些地点采样的158427幅陆地卫星地表反射图像,我们对受影响森林恢复到死亡前状态所需的时间(恢复时间)进行了全球评估。我们的研究结果表明,过去几十年里,全球森林恢复率持续下降,这在绿度和冠层含水量两方面均有体现。自20世纪90年代以来,这种下降尤为明显。对潜在机制的进一步分析表明,全球森林恢复率的下降主要与气温上升和水资源短缺加剧有关,而森林死亡严重程度的升级仅在一定程度上导致了这种下降。此外,我们的全球尺度分析表明,森林冠层含水量的恢复明显滞后于植被绿度的恢复,这意味着仅基于绿度的植被指数可能会高估全球范围内森林死亡后的恢复率。我们的研究结果强调了森林生态系统对未来变暖和水资源不足的脆弱性日益增加,突出了将森林保护和恢复作为缓解气候变化影响努力的一个组成部分加以优先考虑的必要性。