4.7 Article

Do bark beetle outbreaks amplify or dampen future bark beetle disturbances in Central Europe?

Journal

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
Volume 109, Issue 2, Pages 737-749

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.13502

Keywords

climate change; disturbance interactions; diversity; forest composition; forest structure; iLand

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund [Y895-B25]

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Bark beetle outbreaks have intensified in forests globally, with uncertain impacts on future forest development. Research suggests that bark beetle outbreaks, influenced by climate change, alter forest structure and composition, but increased diversity can mitigate future disturbance activities.
Bark beetle outbreaks have intensified in many forests around the globe in recent years. Yet, the legacy of these disturbances for future forest development remains unclear. Bark beetle disturbances are expected to increase further because of climate change. Consequently, feedbacks within the disturbance regime are of growing interest, for example, whether bark beetle outbreaks are amplifying future bark beetle activity (through the initiation of an even-aged cohort of trees) or dampening it (through increased structural and compositional diversity). We studied bark beetle-vegetation-climate interactions in the Bavarian Forest National Park (Germany), an area characterised by unprecedented bark beetle activity in the recent past. We simulated the effect of future bark beetle outbreaks on forest structure and composition and analysed how disturbance-mediated forest dynamics influence future bark beetle activity under different scenarios of climate change. We used process-based simulation modelling in combination with machine learning to disentangle the long-term interactions between vegetation, climate and bark beetles at the landscape scale. Disturbances by the European spruce bark beetle were strongly amplified by climate change, increasing between 59% and 221% compared to reference climate. Bark beetle outbreaks reduced the dominance of Norway spruce (Picea abies(L.) Karst.) on the landscape, increasing compositional diversity. Disturbances decreased structural diversity within stands (alpha diversity) and increased structural diversity between stands (beta diversity). Overall, disturbance-mediated changes in forest structure and composition dampened future disturbance activity (a reduction of up to -67%), but were not able to fully compensate for the amplifying effect of climate change. Synthesis. Our findings indicate that the recent disturbance episode at the Bavarian Forest National Park was caused by a convergence of highly susceptible forest structures with climatic conditions favourable for bark beetle outbreaks. While future climate is increasingly conducive to massive outbreaks, the emerging landscape structure is less and less likely to support them. This study improves our understanding of the long-term legacies of ongoing bark beetle disturbances in Central Europe. It indicates that increased diversity provides an important dampening feedback, and suggests that preventing disturbances or homogenizing post-disturbance forests could elevate the future susceptibility to large-scale bark beetle outbreaks.

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