Contrasting microclimates among hedgerows and woodlands across temperate Europe
•We quantified microclimatic temperature buffering along hedgerow-woodland transects across Europe.•Hedgerows are less efficient thermal insulators than woodlands, notably at high ambient temperatures.•Temperatures in hedgerows are most extreme around 10 m from the woodland edges.•Wider hedgerows wi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Agricultural and forest meteorology 2020-02, Vol.281, p.107818, Article 107818 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •We quantified microclimatic temperature buffering along hedgerow-woodland transects across Europe.•Hedgerows are less efficient thermal insulators than woodlands, notably at high ambient temperatures.•Temperatures in hedgerows are most extreme around 10 m from the woodland edges.•Wider hedgerows with a tall and dense tree layer provide better buffering against temperature extremes.
Hedgerows have the potential to facilitate the persistence and migration of species across landscapes, mostly due to benign microclimatic conditions. This thermal buffering function may become even more important in the future for species migration under climate change. Unfortunately, there is a lack of empirical studies quantifying the microclimate of hedgerows, particularly at broad geographical scales.
Here we monitored sub-canopy temperatures using 168 miniature temperature sensors distributed along woodland-hedgerow transects, and spanning a 1600-km macroclimatic gradient across Europe. First, we assessed the variation in the temperature offset (that is, the difference between sub-canopy and corresponding macroclimate temperatures) for minimum, mean and maximum temperatures along the woodland-hedgerow transects. Next, we linked the observed patterns to macroclimate temperatures as well as canopy structure, overstorey composition and hedgerow characteristics.
The sub-canopy versus macroclimate temperature offset was on average 0.10 °C lower in hedgerows than in woodlands. Minimum winter temperatures were consistently lower by 0.10 °C in hedgerows than in woodlands, while maximum summer temperatures were 0.80 °C higher, albeit mainly around the woodland-hedgerow ecotone. The temperature offset was often negatively correlated with macroclimate temperatures. The slope of this relationship was lower for maximum temperatures in hedgerows than in woodlands. During summer, canopy cover, tree height and hedgerow width had strong cooling effects on maximum mid-day temperatures in hedgerows. The effects of shrub height, shrub cover and shade-casting ability, however, were not significant.
To our knowledge, this is the first study to quantify hedgerow microclimates along a continental-scale environmental gradient. We show that hedgerows are less efficient thermal insulators than woodlands, especially at high ambient temperatures (e.g. on warm summer days). This knowledge will not only result in better predictions of species distribution across fragmented landscapes, but will also help |
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ISSN: | 0168-1923 1873-2240 1873-2240 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.agrformet.2019.107818 |