4.7 Article

Climate change alters the ability of neotropical forests to provide timber and sequester carbon

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 492, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119166

Keywords

Aboveground biomass; Timber harvest; Climate change mitigation; Forest degradation; Individual-based forest modeling; Forest management; Tropical forestry; French Guiana; Paracou

Categories

Funding

  1. Germand Federal Environmental Foundation -DBU [AZ 20015/398]
  2. Helmholtz Alliance Remote Sensing and Earth System Dynamics
  3. European FEDER funds [GY0006894]
  4. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-10-LABX-0025]

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Selective logging and climate change have significant combined effects on biomass stocks and timber harvest in tropical forests, with repeated logging impacting biomass and timber supply irrespective of climate change intensity. Moderate climate change leads to a slight decrease in average biomass, while intensive climate change can result in a substantial decrease. The combination of selective logging and climate change increases the likelihood of changes in forest dynamics, with rising temperatures playing a key role in driving these changes.
Logging is widespread in tropical regions, with approximately 50% of all humid tropical forests (1.73 ? 109 ha) regarded as production forests. To maintain the ecosystem functions of carbon sequestration and timber supply in tropical production forests over a long term, forest management must be sustainable under changing climate conditions. Individual-based forest models are useful tools to enhance our understanding about the long-term effects of harvest and climate change on forest dynamics because they link empirical field data with simulations of ecological processes. The objective of this study is to analyze the combined effects of selective logging and climate change on biomass stocks and timber harvest in a tropical forest in French Guiana. By applying a forest model, we simulated natural forest dynamics under the baseline scenario of current climate conditions and compared the results with scenarios of selective logging under climate change. The analyses revealed how substantially forest dynamics are altered under different scenarios of climate change. (1) Repeated logging within recovery times decreased biomass and timber harvest, irrespective of the intensity of climate change. (2) With moderate climate change as envisaged by the 5th IPCC Assessment Report (representative concentration pathway 2.6), the average biomass remained the same as in the baseline scenario (-1%), but with intensive climate change (RCP 8.5), the average biomass decreased by 12%. (3) The combination of selective logging and climate change increased the likelihood of changes in forest dynamics, driven mainly by rising temperatures. Under RCP 8.5, the average timber harvest was almost halved, regardless of the logging cycle applied. An application-oriented use of forest models will help to identify opportunities to reduce the effects of unwanted ecosystem changes in a changing environment. To ensure that ecosystem functions in production forests are maintained under climate change conditions, appropriate management strategies will help to maintain biomass and harvest in production forests.

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