4.5 Article

Effects of past and present microclimates on northern and southern plant species in a managed forest landscape

Journal

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 34, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jvs.13197

Keywords

abundance; boreal forest; climate; forest management; occurrence; presence-absence; regional co-existence; species responses; time-lags; understorey plants

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The study shows the potential importance of past and present microclimate heterogeneity for the co-existence of species with different temperature preferences in the same landscape, and the possibility to manage microclimates to mitigate climate change impacts on forest biodiversity.
Questions Near-ground temperatures can vary substantially over relatively short distances, enabling species with different temperature preferences and geographical distributions to co-exist within a small area. In a forest landscape, the near-ground temperatures may change due to management activities that alter forest density. As a result of such management activities, current species distributions and performances might not only be affected by current microclimates, but also by past conditions due to time-lagged responses.Location Sweden.Methods We examined the effects of past and current microclimates on the distributions and performances of two northern, cold-favoured, and two southern, warm-favoured, plant species in 53 managed forest sites. Each pair was represented by one vascular plant and one bryophyte species. We used temperature logger data and predictions from microclimate models based on changes in basal area to relate patterns of occurrence, abundance, and reproduction to current and past microclimate.Results The two northern species were generally favoured by microclimates that were currently cold, characterised by later snowmelt and low accumulated heat over the growing season. In contrast, the two southern species were generally favoured by currently warm microclimates, characterised by high accumulated heat over the growing season. Species generally had higher abundance in sites with a preferred microclimate both in the past and present, and lower abundance than expected from current conditions, if the past microclimate had changed from warm to cold or vice versa, indicating time-lags in abundance patterns of the species.Conclusions Our results show a potential importance of past and present microclimate heterogeneity for the co-existence of species with different temperature preferences in the same landscape and highlight the possibility to manage microclimates to mitigate climate change impacts on forest biodiversity.

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