Farfan-Rios William, Feeley Kenneth J, Myers Jonathan A, Tello Sebastian, Sallo-Bravo Jhonatan, Malhi Yadvinder, Phillips Oliver L, Baker Timothy R, Nina-Quispe Alex, Garcia-Cabrera Karina, Saatchi Sasan S, Terborgh John W, Pitman Nigel C A, Monteagudo Mendoza Abel Lorenzo, Vasquez Rodolfo, Salinas Norma, Cayola Leslie, Fuentes Claros Alfredo, Loza Maria I, Nuñez Vargas Percy, Silman Miles R
Andrew Sabin Center for Environment and Sustainability and Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27109.
Living Earth Collaborative, Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Aug 26;122(34):e2425619122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2425619122. Epub 2025 Aug 19.
Climate change is shifting species distributions, leading to changes in community composition and novel species assemblages worldwide. However, the responses of tropical forests to climate change across large-scale environmental gradients remain largely unexplored. Using long-term data over 66,000 trees of more than 2,500 species occurring over 3,500 m elevation along the hyperdiverse Amazon-to-Andes elevational gradients in Peru and Bolivia, we assessed community-level shifts in species composition over a 40+ y time span. We tested the thermophilization hypothesis, which predicts an increase in the relative abundances of species from warmer climates through time. Additionally, we examined the relative contributions of tree mortality, recruitment, and growth to the observed compositional changes. Mean thermophilization rates (TR) across the Amazon-to-Andes gradient were slow relative to regional temperature change. TR were positive and more variable among Andean forest plots compared to Amazonian plots but were highest at midelevations around the cloud base. Across all elevations, TR were driven primarily by tree mortality and decreased growth of highland (cool-adapted) species rather than an influx of lowland species with higher thermal optima. Given the high variability of community-level responses to warming along the elevational gradients, the high tree mortality, and the slower-than-warming rates of compositional change, we conclude that most tropical tree species, and especially lowland Amazonian tree species, will not be able to escape current or future climate change through upward range shifts, causing fundamental changes to composition and function in Earth's highest diversity forests.
气候变化正在改变物种分布,导致全球范围内群落组成的变化和新的物种组合。然而,热带森林在大规模环境梯度上对气候变化的响应在很大程度上仍未得到探索。利用秘鲁和玻利维亚沿高度多样化的亚马逊到安第斯山脉海拔梯度上超过2500种、66000多棵树的长期数据,我们评估了40多年时间跨度内物种组成在群落水平上的变化。我们检验了嗜热化假说,该假说预测随着时间推移,来自温暖气候的物种相对丰度会增加。此外,我们研究了树木死亡、更新和生长对观察到的组成变化的相对贡献。相对于区域温度变化,亚马逊到安第斯山脉梯度上的平均嗜热化率(TR)较慢。与亚马逊地区的样地相比,安第斯森林样地的TR为正且变化更大,但在云底附近的中海拔地区最高。在所有海拔高度上,TR主要由树木死亡和高地(适应凉爽环境)物种生长减少驱动,而非具有较高最适温度的低地物种的迁入。鉴于群落水平对沿海拔梯度变暖的响应具有高度变异性、树木死亡率高以及组成变化速度慢于变暖速度,我们得出结论,大多数热带树种,尤其是低地亚马逊树种,将无法通过向上迁移范围来逃避当前或未来的气候变化,这将导致地球上生物多样性最高的森林在组成和功能上发生根本性变化。