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Título : Compositional response of Amazon forests to climate change
Autor : Esquivel Muelbert, Adriane
Baker, Timothy R.
Dexter, Kyle G.
Lewis, Simon L.
Peñuela Mora, María Cristina
Palabras clave : Bibliomatic niches
Climate change
Compositional shifts
Funtional traits
Temporal trends
Tropial forests
Fecha de publicación : 2018
Editorial : Blackwell Publishing Inc.
Citación : Esquivel-Muelbert, A., Baker, T. R., Dexter, K.G., Lewis, S.L., Brienen, R.J.W., Feldpausch, T.R., ..., Phillips, O.L. (2019). Compositional response of Amazon forests to climate change. Global Change Biology, 25(1), 39-56. doi:10.1111/gcb.14413
Citación : PRODUCCION CIENTÍFICA-ARTÍCULOS;A-IKIAM-000046
Resumen : Most of the planet's diversity is concentrated in the tropics, which includes many regions undergoing rapid climate change. Yet, while climate‐induced biodiversity changes are widely documented elsewhere, few studies have addressed this issue for lowland tropical ecosystems. Here we investigate whether the floristic and func- tional composition of intact lowland Amazonian forests have been changing by eval- uating records from 106 long‐term inventory plots spanning 30 years. We analyse three traits that have been hypothesized to respond to different environmental dri- vers (increase in moisture stress and atmospheric CO2 concentrations): maximum tree size, biogeographic water‐deficit affiliation and wood density. Tree communities have become increasingly dominated by large‐statured taxa, but to date there has been no detectable change in mean wood density or water deficit affiliation at the community level, despite most forest plots having experienced an intensification of the dry season. However, among newly recruited trees, dry‐affiliated genera have become more abundant, while the mortality of wet‐affiliated genera has increased in those plots where the dry season has intensified most. Thus, a slow shift to a more dry‐affiliated Amazonia is underway, with changes in compositional dynamics (recruits and mortality) consistent with climate‐change drivers, but yet to signifi- cantly impact whole‐community composition. The Amazon observational record sug- gests that the increase in atmospheric CO2 is driving a shift within tree communities to large‐statured species and that climate changes to date will impact forest composition, but long generation times of tropical trees mean that biodiver- sity change is lagging behind climate change.
URI : http://repositorio.ikiam.edu.ec/jspui/handle/RD_IKIAM/104
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14413
Otros identificadores : https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14413
Aparece en las colecciones: ARTÍCULOS CIENTÍFICOS

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