An individual-based forest model links canopy dynamics and shade tolerances along a soil moisture gradient
Authored by Jean Lienard, Nikolay Strigul
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.150589
Sponsors:
Simons Foundation
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Understanding how forested ecosystems respond to climatic changes is a
challenging problem as forest self-organization occurs simultaneously
across multiple scales. Here, we explore the hypothesis that soil water
availability shapes above-ground competition and gap dynamics, and
ultimately alters the dominance of shade tolerant and intolerant species
along the moisture gradient. We adapt a spatially explicit
individual-based model with simultaneous crown and root competitions.
Simulations show that the transition from xeric to mesic soils is
accompanied by an increase in shade-tolerant species similar to the
patterns documented in the North American forests. This transition is
accompanied by a change from water to sunlight competitions, and happens
at three successive stages: (i) mostly water-limited parkland, (ii)
simultaneously water-and sunlight-limited closed canopy forests
featuring a very sparse understory, and (iii) mostly sunlight-limited
forests with a populated understory. This pattern is caused by
contrasting successional dynamics that favour either shade-tolerant or
shade-intolerant species, depending on soil moisture and understory
density. This work demonstrates that forest patterns along environmental
gradients can emerge from spatial competition without physiological
trade-offs between shade and growth tolerance. Mechanistic understanding
of population processes involved in the forest-parkland-desert
transition will improve our ability to explain species distributions and
predict forest responses to climatic changes.
Tags
Life-history
Trade-offs
Field-measurements
Change-type drought
Niche differentiation
Root
competition
Plant succession
Woody seedlings
Tree mortality
Gap
dynamics