Persistent yet vulnerable: resurvey of an Abies ecotone reveals few differences but vulnerability to climate change

Climate change is shifting forest tree species distributions across elevational and latitudinal gradients, and these changes are often pronounced at ecotones where species meet their climatic bounds and are replaced by other species. Using an extensive ecotone composed of lower-montane white fir (Ab...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology (Durham) 2021-12, Vol.102 (12), p.1-16
Hauptverfasser: Nelson, Kellen N., O’Dean, Emily, Knapp, Eric E., Parker, Albert J., Bisbing, Sarah M.
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container_issue 12
container_start_page 1
container_title Ecology (Durham)
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creator Nelson, Kellen N.
O’Dean, Emily
Knapp, Eric E.
Parker, Albert J.
Bisbing, Sarah M.
description Climate change is shifting forest tree species distributions across elevational and latitudinal gradients, and these changes are often pronounced at ecotones where species meet their climatic bounds and are replaced by other species. Using an extensive ecotone composed of lower-montane white fir (Abies concolor var. lowiana) and upper-montane red fir (Abies magnifica var. magnifica) in the central Sierra Nevada range of California, USA, we (1) examined how the demographics of the ecotone have responded to recent climate using a field observational study and a historical dataset, (2) quantified climate drivers across species life stages using contemporary demographic data, and (3) tested the potential impacts of future climate on species-specific seedling survival and growth in a fully factorial growth chamber experiment that varied temperature, growing season length, and water availability. A re-examination of the ecotone midpoint after 35 yr suggested a reduction in A. concolor sapling and tree densities and a rise in A. magnifica proportional dominance between surveys. Seedling abundances across the ecotone indicated that A. magnifica tends to dominate the regeneration layer and currently forms an important component of the seedling community at elevations below those where A. magnifica saplings or trees begin to co-dominate stands. Observational and experimental assessments suggest that temperature and precipitation serve as important drivers, differentiating A. concolor vs. A. magnifica distributions, and are primary stressors at the seedling stage. Seedlings of both species were adversely affected by experimental climate treatments, although A. concolor exhibited greater survival and a more conservative growth strategy under extreme climatic stress than A. magnifica. Projections indicate that historical climate conditions will rise by an amount greater than the ecotone’s current elevational extent by the end of the 21st century. Differential drivers of species abundances suggest that the projected climate will expand conditions that promote A. concolor abundance and impede A. magnifica abundance across the ecotone; however, disturbance activity and microclimatic conditions will also influence regeneration and overstory tree dynamics. Our study demonstrates the importance of quantifying species-specific responses to climate and indicates that widespread regeneration failure may be one possible consequence in which species exhibit strong sensitivity to
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library
subjects Abies
Abies concolor
Abies magnifica
Climate Change
climate envelope
climate tolerance
Climatic conditions
Demography
distribution shifts
ecotone
Ecotones
elevational gradient
Forests
Growing season
growth chamber experiment
Growth chambers
Plant species
Regeneration
Seedlings
Sierra Nevada
Species
species demographics
species distribution
Survival
Trees
Water availability
title Persistent yet vulnerable: resurvey of an Abies ecotone reveals few differences but vulnerability to climate change
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