Evaluating forest resilience to global threats using functional response traits and network properties.

Ecol Appl

CEF, Université du Québec à Montréal, Centre d'étude de la forêt, uqam Case postale 8888, succursale Centre-ville, Montreal, Quebec, H3C 3P8, Canada.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ecosystem functions of forests face threats from global changes like climate warming, land-use changes, and invasive species, necessitating new resilience-based management strategies.
  • A multidimensional approach focusing on species traits and forest connectivity is proposed to assess forest resilience in a rural landscape of southeastern Canada, comparing two management strategies: functional enrichment and multi-species plantations.
  • Results indicate both strategies improve resilience by enhancing functional diversity and connectivity, but prioritizing functional enrichment in less diverse patches is more effective, while randomly distributed plantations increase connectivity more than those in specific areas.

Article Abstract

Ecosystem functions provided by forests are threatened by direct and indirect effects of global change drivers such as climate warming land-use change, biological invasions, and shifting natural disturbance regimes. To develop resilience-based forest management, new tools and methods are needed to quantitatively estimate forest resilience to management and future natural disturbances. We propose a multidimensional evaluation of ecological resilience based on species functional response traits (e.g., functional response diversity and functional redundancy) and network properties of forested patches (e.g., connectivity, modularity, and centrality). Using a fragmented rural landscape in temperate south-eastern Canada as a reference landscape, we apply our multidimensional approach to evaluate two alternative management strategies at three levels of intensity: (1) functional enrichment of current forest patches and (2) multi-species plantations in previously non-forested patches. Within each management strategy, planted species are selected to maximize functional diversity, drought tolerance, or pest resistance. We further compare how ecological resilience under these alternative management strategies responds to three simulated disturbances: drought, pest outbreak, and timber harvesting. We found that both management strategies enhance resilience at the landscape scale by increasing functional response diversity and connectivity. Specifically, when the less functionally diverse patches are prioritized for management, functional enrichment is more effective than the establishment of new multi-species plantations in increasing resilience. In addition, randomly allocated multi-species plantations increased connectivity more than those allocated in riparian areas. Our results show that across various management strategies, planting species to enhance biodiversity led to the highest increase in functional response diversity while planting pest-resistant species led to the highest increase in landscape connectivity. Planting biodiversity-enhancing species (i.e., species that maximize functional diversity) mitigated drought effects equally well as planting with drought-tolerant species. Our multidimensional approach facilitates the characterization at the landscape scale of forest resilience to disturbances using both functional diversity and network properties while accounting for the importance of response traits to future disturbances. The simulation approach we used can be applied to forest landscapes across different biomes for the evaluation and comparison of forest management initiatives to enhance resilience.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eap.2095DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

functional response
20
management strategies
16
forest resilience
12
response traits
12
network properties
12
response diversity
12
multi-species plantations
12
functional diversity
12
functional
11
management
9

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!