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The interaction between a drying climate and land use affects forest structure and above‐ground carbon storage
Author(s) -
Bennett Joanne M.,
Cunningham Shaun C.,
Connelly Christine A.,
Clarke Rohan H.,
Thomson James R.,
Mac Nally Ralph
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
global ecology and biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.164
H-Index - 152
eISSN - 1466-8238
pISSN - 1466-822X
DOI - 10.1111/geb.12083
Subject(s) - vegetation (pathology) , environmental science , canopy , basal area , transect , climate change , litter , ecology , shrub , ecosystem , carbon sequestration , forestry , atmospheric sciences , geography , biology , carbon dioxide , medicine , pathology , geology
Aim Climate change has been linked to negative effects on vegetation, including drought‐induced dieback. Large‐scale dieback not only leads to considerable carbon emissions but often leads to loss of ecological resources. We investigated whether, and how, the structure, composition and carbon content changed over a period of extended drought (the ‘ B ig D ry’) in a much‐modified forest ecosystem. We explored whether landscape configuration, management practice or soil type influenced vegetation change. Location The B ox‐ I ronbark forests of south‐eastern A ustralia. Methods In 2010, we remeasured 120 forest transects that had first been measured in 1997 by using identical field methods. Vegetation structure and composition were quantified. We used allometric growth models to estimate the expected increase in above‐ground carbon ( AGC ) storage between 1997 and 2010; these estimates were compared with observed values. Results Forest structure was systematically different between the two periods. Canopy cover, shrub cover and litter decreased between the 1997 and 2010 surveys, whereas total basal area of dead trees, dead trees in all size classes and saplings increased between the two surveys. Climate, fragment size and their interaction were the major predictors of change in most of the measured vegetation characteristics. By comparing measured AGC in 2010 and estimates from growth models, we estimated that 5.6 ± 2.1 SE t C ha −1 may have been foregone over the B ig D ry. Main conclusions Our findings add to the evidence linking climate change to negative effects on vegetation, including mortality, canopy dieback and reduced carbon sequestration. These effects may be amplified in fragmented vegetation because of greater water and heat stress. If the carbon sequestration deficit of c.  5.6 t C ha −1 were to apply across the extant Box‐Ironbark forests of V ictoria ( c . 255,400 ha), then 1.43 M t of carbon sequestration may not have occurred during the B ig D ry.

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