4.7 Article

Climate change would lead to a sharp acceleration of Central African forests dynamics by the end of the century

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/aafb81

Keywords

tropical rainforest; climate change; CORDEX-Africa; M'Baiki experimental site; ecological guilds; mixture of matrix models; variable selection

Funding

  1. Bureau for Economic Theory and Applications [ANR-11-LABX-000201]
  2. Georgetown Environment Initiative award
  3. DYNAFFOR project (French Fund for the Global Environment (FFEM)) [CZZ1636.01D]

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Impacts of climate change on the future dynamics of Central African forests are still largely unknown, despite the acuteness of the expected climate changes and the extent of these forests. The high diversity of species and the potentially equivalent diversity of responses to climate modifications are major difficulties encountered when using predictive models to evaluate these impacts. In this study, we applied a mixture of inhomogeneous matrix models to a long-term experimental site located in M'Baiki forests, in the Central African Republic. This model allows the clustering of tree species into processes-based groups while simultaneously selecting explanatory climate and stand variables at the group-level. Using downscaled outputs of 10. general circulation models (GCM), we projected the future forest dynamics up to the end of the century, under constant climate and Representative Concentration Pathways. 4.5 and. 8.5. Through comparative analyses across GCM versions, we identified tree species meta-groups, which are more adapted than ecological guilds to describe the diversity of tree species dynamics and their responses to climate change. Projections under constant climate were consistent with a forest ageing phenomenon, with a slowdown in tree growth and a reduction of the relative abundance of short-lived pioneers. Projections under climate change showed a general increase in growth, mortality and recruitment. This acceleration in forest dynamics led to a strong natural thinning effect, with different magnitudes across species. These differences caused a compositional shift in favour of long-lived pioneers, at the detriment of shade-bearers. Consistent with other field studies and projections, our results show the importance of elucidating the diversity of tree species responses when considering the general sensitivity of Central African forests dynamics to climate change.

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