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DOI | 10.1002/ecy.2579 |
The potential role of intrinsic processes in generating abrupt and quasi-synchronous tree declines during the Holocene | |
Ramiadantsoa, Tanjona1; Stegner, M. Allison1; Williams, John W.2,3; Ives, Anthony R.1 | |
发表日期 | 2019 |
ISSN | 0012-9658 |
EISSN | 1939-9170 |
卷号 | 100期号:2 |
英文摘要 | Multiple abrupt and sometimes near-synchronous declines in tree populations have been detected in the temperate forests of eastern North America and Europe during the Holocene. Traditional approaches to understanding these declines focus on searching for climatic or other broad-scale extrinsic drivers. These approaches include multi-proxy studies that match reconstructed changes in tree abundance to reconstructed changes in precipitation or temperature. Although these correlative approaches are informative, they neglect the potential role of intrinsic processes, such as competition and dispersal, in shaping tree community dynamics. We developed a simple process-based community model that includes competition among tree species, density-dependent survival, and dispersal to investigate how these processes might generate abrupt changes in tree abundances even when extrinsic climatic factors do not themselves change abruptly. Specifically, a self-reinforcing (i.e., positive) feedback between abundance and survival can produce abrupt changes in tree abundance in the absence of long-term climatic changes. Furthermore, spatially correlated, short-term environmental variation and seed dispersal can increase the synchrony of abrupt changes. Using the well-studied, late-Holocene crash of Tsuga canadensis (eastern hemlock) populations as an empirical case study, we find that our model generates abrupt and quasi-synchronized crashes qualitatively similar to the observed hemlock patterns. Other tree taxa vary in the frequency and clustering of abrupt change and the proportion of increases and decreases. This complexity argues for caution in interpreting abrupt changes in species abundances as indicative of abrupt climatic changes. Nonetheless, some taxa show patterns that the model cannot produce: observed abrupt declines in hemlock abundance are more synchronized than abrupt increases, whereas the degree of synchronization is the same for abrupt decreases and increases in the model. Our results show that intrinsic processes can be significant contributing factors in abrupt tree population changes and highlight the diagnostic value of analyzing entire time series rather than single events when testing hypotheses about abrupt changes. Thus, intrinsic processes should be considered along with extrinsic drivers when seeking to explain rapid changes in community composition. |
WOS研究方向 | Environmental Sciences & Ecology |
来源期刊 | ECOLOGY |
文献类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/93025 |
作者单位 | 1.Univ Wisconsin, Dept Integrat Biol, Madison, WI 53706 USA; 2.Univ Wisconsin, Dept Geog, Madison, WI 53706 USA; 3.Univ Wisconsin, Ctr Climat Res, Madison, WI 53706 USA |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Ramiadantsoa, Tanjona,Stegner, M. Allison,Williams, John W.,et al. The potential role of intrinsic processes in generating abrupt and quasi-synchronous tree declines during the Holocene[J],2019,100(2). |
APA | Ramiadantsoa, Tanjona,Stegner, M. Allison,Williams, John W.,&Ives, Anthony R..(2019).The potential role of intrinsic processes in generating abrupt and quasi-synchronous tree declines during the Holocene.ECOLOGY,100(2). |
MLA | Ramiadantsoa, Tanjona,et al."The potential role of intrinsic processes in generating abrupt and quasi-synchronous tree declines during the Holocene".ECOLOGY 100.2(2019). |
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