4.7 Article

Emerging stability of forest productivity by mixing two species buffers temperature destabilizing effect

期刊

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
卷 59, 期 11, 页码 2730-2741

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.14267

关键词

additive effect; climate effect; forest ecosystems productivity; mixed forests; overyielding; species asynchrony; temporal stability

资金

  1. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV-18-0390]
  2. EMU Projects [P200029MIME, P180024MIME]
  3. Estonian Research Council [PRG1586]
  4. Polish Government MNiSW 2018-P-2021 Matching Fund [117/H2020/2018]
  5. National Agency of Agricultural Research [QK21020307]
  6. CARE4C [778322]
  7. ERA-Net SUMFOREST [PCIN2017-026/-027]
  8. [CLU-2019-01-iuFOR-UVa]
  9. [VA183P20-SMART]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The increasing disturbances in monocultures around the world have led to a growing demand for species mixing. This study analyzed forest data from a wide range of climate conditions in Europe and found that mixing species can significantly increase both the level and stability of stand growth. Temperature was identified as a key factor destabilizing stand growth, which can be mitigated by species mixing. Asynchrony between species was confirmed as the main driver of temporal stability in mixed stands.
The increasing disturbances in monocultures around the world are testimony to their instability under global change. Many studies have claimed that temporal stability of productivity increases with species richness, although the ecological fundamentals have mainly been investigated through diversity experiments. To adequately manage forest ecosystems, it is necessary to have a comprehensive understanding of the effect of mixing species on the temporal stability of productivity and the way in which it is influenced by climate conditions across large geographical areas. Here, we used a unique dataset of 261 stands combining pure and two-species mixtures of four relevant tree species over a wide range of climate conditions in Europe to examine the effect of species mixing on the level and temporal stability of productivity. Structural equation modelling was employed to further explore the direct and indirect influence of climate, overyielding, species asynchrony and additive effect (i.e. temporal stability expected from the species growth in monospecific stands) on temporal stability in mixed forests. We showed that by adding only one tree species to monocultures, the level (overyielding: +6%) and stability (temporal stability: +12%) of stand growth increased significantly. We identified the key effect of temperature on destabilizing stand growth, which may be mitigated by mixing species. We further confirmed asynchrony as the main driver of temporal stability in mixed stands, through both the additive effect and species interactions, which modify between-species asynchrony in mixtures in comparison to monocultures. Synthesis and applications. This study highlights the emergent properties associated with mixing two species, which result in resource efficient and temporally stable production systems. We reveal the negative impact of mean temperature on temporal stability of forest productivity and how the stabilizing effect of mixing two species can counterbalance this impact. The overyielding and temporal stability of growth addressed in this paper are essential for ecosystem services closely linked with the level and rhythm of forest growth. Our results underline that mixing two species can be a realistic and effective nature-based climate solution, which could contribute towards meeting EU climate target policies.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.7
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据