Mangrove tree growth is size-dependent across a large-scale salinity gradient

•Mangrove tree growth is size-dependent.•Increasing salinity reverses the growth dominance pattern.•Large trees are losing growth due to increasing salinity.•Small trees are the primary contributors to forest growth in higher salinity areas.•Increased structural diversity may benefit mangrove forest...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forest ecology and management 2023-06, Vol.537, p.120954, Article 120954
Hauptverfasser: Ahmed, Shamim, Sarker, Swapan Kumar, Friess, Daniel A., Kamruzzaman, Md, Jacobs, Martin, Sillanpää, Mériadec, Naabeh, Clement Sullibie Saagulo, Pretzsch, Hans
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Mangrove tree growth is size-dependent.•Increasing salinity reverses the growth dominance pattern.•Large trees are losing growth due to increasing salinity.•Small trees are the primary contributors to forest growth in higher salinity areas.•Increased structural diversity may benefit mangrove forest functioning, but species diversity may not. Salinity-influenced ecosystems are projected to face a tree to stand level growth reduction as a response to climate change. Although large and mature trees play a central role in defining carbon dynamics and site conditions, their eco-physiological and functional responses to increasing salinity remain poorly understood. Therefore, we test our hypotheses, i.e., large-diameter trees are predominantly contributing to above-ground biomass (AGB) stocks, whilst small-diameter trees are mainly contributing to AGB growth or gain (biomass changes over time) in higher salinity areas of the Sundarbans mangrove forest, Bangladesh. It can further be expressed by a growth dominance coefficient (GDC) that turns negative (a negative GDC indicates small trees proportionately contribute more to growth) in high-salinity areas while remaining positive in lower-salinity areas. We also hypothesized that species and structural diversity positively influence AGB stocks and gain. To test our hypotheses, we employed data from 60 permanent sample plots installed in the Sundarbans mangrove forest to estimate size-dependent functions by examining tree size, diversity, and growth dominance patterns to salinity gradients. Trees in higher salinity areas showed negative or reverse growth dominance patterns, indicating large trees contributed less to forest growth, which means smaller trees were disproportionately responsible for growth within the stand. Across the salinity zones, large-diameter (>20 cm in diameter at breast height, DBH) trees contributed primarily to AGB stocks, while small-diameter (
ISSN:0378-1127
1872-7042
DOI:10.1016/j.foreco.2023.120954