4.7 Article

Widespread shifts in the demographic structure of subalpine forests in the Sierra Nevada, California, 1934 to 2007

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages 264-276

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2011.00748.x

Keywords

California; climate change; composition shifts; demographic structure; forest; resampling; Sierra Nevada; subalpine; VTM; Wieslander

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [0819493]
  2. California Energy Commission PIER Program [CEC PIR-08-006]
  3. USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region Ecology Program
  4. Tahoe Conservancy
  5. Ernest Hill Foundation of UC-Davis
  6. Davis Botanical Society
  7. Northern California Botanists
  8. California Native Plant Society
  9. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  10. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [0819493] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Aim Many climate-linked vegetation models predict major contraction of subalpine forests within the next 100 years, which would require a relatively rapid replacement of high-elevation species by lower-elevation species over large portions of subalpine forest. We tested this prediction by comparing empirical data from a historic data set with data collected from re-sampled sites from 200709. Location Central Sierra Nevada, CA, USA, 23003400m elevation. Methods We re-sampled 139 undisturbed historical vegetation plots across 5500km2 originally sampled from 192934 in the subalpine zone of the Sierra Nevada, and compared historical with current forest structure and composition. We compared historic and modern climatic conditions using two high-elevation climate stations nearby. Results Subalpine forests experienced a net increase in tree stem density of 30.4%, including a 63.3% increase in small trees. Six of eight tree species showed statistically significant increases in small tree density, including species with distributions at both the upper and lower boundaries of subalpine. Increases in small tree density were partly offset by a 20% decrease in large trees. These shifts were significant throughout the landscape of our study area. Modern stand composition was indistinguishable from historical composition. Daily minimum temperature (+1.2 degrees C) and precipitation (+1548%) both increased during the same period. Main conclusions Warming temperatures plus steady to increasing precipitation have led to less stressful conditions for recruitment and survival of small trees, and are probably contributing to increased mortality of large trees. Tree abundance and composition in the subalpine has not changed in the direction predicted by vegetation models linked to future climate scenarios. Our results underline the fundamental role that moisture balance plays in structuring mediterranean-zone montane forests. Future shifts in vegetation composition and structure from these regions are likely to depend on interactions between water balance and disturbance factors like fire, insects and disease.

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