Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.

Few studies have quantified regional variation in tree mortality, or explored whether species compositional changes or within-species variation are responsible for regional patterns, despite the fact that mortality has direct effects on the dynamics of woody biomass, species composition, stand struc...

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Main Authors: Emily R Lines, David A Coomes, Drew W Purves
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2954149?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9f8d0ca5155b4ed09220c9a616eea6ec2020-11-25T02:27:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-01-01510e1321210.1371/journal.pone.0013212Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.Emily R LinesDavid A CoomesDrew W PurvesFew studies have quantified regional variation in tree mortality, or explored whether species compositional changes or within-species variation are responsible for regional patterns, despite the fact that mortality has direct effects on the dynamics of woody biomass, species composition, stand structure, wood production and forest response to climate change. Using bayesian analysis of over 430,000 tree records from a large eastern US forest database we characterised tree mortality as a function of climate, soils, species and size (stem diameter). We found (1) mortality is U-shaped vs. stem diameter for all 21 species examined; (2) mortality is hump-shaped vs. plot basal area for most species; (3) geographical variation in mortality is substantial, and correlated with several environmental factors; and (4) individual species vary substantially from the combined average in the nature and magnitude of their mortality responses to environmental variation. Regional variation in mortality is therefore the product of variation in species composition combined with highly varied mortality-environment correlations within species. The results imply that variation in mortality is a crucial part of variation in the forest carbon cycle, such that including this variation in models of the global carbon cycle could significantly narrow uncertainty in climate change predictions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2954149?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emily R Lines
David A Coomes
Drew W Purves
spellingShingle Emily R Lines
David A Coomes
Drew W Purves
Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Emily R Lines
David A Coomes
Drew W Purves
author_sort Emily R Lines
title Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.
title_short Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.
title_full Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.
title_fullStr Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.
title_full_unstemmed Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern US.
title_sort influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern us.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-01-01
description Few studies have quantified regional variation in tree mortality, or explored whether species compositional changes or within-species variation are responsible for regional patterns, despite the fact that mortality has direct effects on the dynamics of woody biomass, species composition, stand structure, wood production and forest response to climate change. Using bayesian analysis of over 430,000 tree records from a large eastern US forest database we characterised tree mortality as a function of climate, soils, species and size (stem diameter). We found (1) mortality is U-shaped vs. stem diameter for all 21 species examined; (2) mortality is hump-shaped vs. plot basal area for most species; (3) geographical variation in mortality is substantial, and correlated with several environmental factors; and (4) individual species vary substantially from the combined average in the nature and magnitude of their mortality responses to environmental variation. Regional variation in mortality is therefore the product of variation in species composition combined with highly varied mortality-environment correlations within species. The results imply that variation in mortality is a crucial part of variation in the forest carbon cycle, such that including this variation in models of the global carbon cycle could significantly narrow uncertainty in climate change predictions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2954149?pdf=render
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