There is a newer version of the record available.

Published August 30, 2024 | Version v1
Other Open

Data from: Beyond resilience: Responses to changing climate and disturbance regimes in temperate forest landscapes across the Northern Hemisphere

  • 1. Technical University Munich
  • 2. University of Tokyo
  • 3. Madison University
  • 4. Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

Description

Climate change has profound impacts on forest ecosystem dynamics and could lead to the emergence of novel ecosystems via changes in species composition, forest structure, and potentially a complete loss of tree cover. Disturbances fundamentally shape those dynamics: the prevailing disturbance regime determines the inherent variability of a system, and its climate-mediated change could accelerate forest transformation. We used the individual-based forest landscape and disturbance model iLand to investigate the resilience of three protected temperate forest landscapes on three continents – selected to represent a gradient from low to high disturbance activity – to changing climate and disturbance regimes. In scenarios of sustained strong global warming, natural disturbances increased across all landscapes regardless of projected changes in precipitation (up to a seven-fold increase in disturbance rate over the 180-year simulation period). Landscapes with historically high disturbance activity had a higher chance of remaining resilient in the future, retaining their structure and composition within the range of variability inherent to the system. However, the risk of regime shift and forest loss was also highest in these systems, suggesting forests may be vulnerable to abrupt change beyond a threshold of increasing disturbance activity. Resilience generally decreased with increasing severity of climate change. Novelty in tree species composition was more common than novelty in forest structure, especially under dry climate scenarios. Forests close to the upper tree line experienced high novelty in structure across all three study systems. Our results highlight common patterns and processes of forest change, while also underlining the diverse and context-specific responses of temperate forest landscapes to climate change. Understanding past and future disturbance regimes can anticipate the magnitude and direction of forest change. Yet, even across a broad gradient of disturbance activity, we conclude that climate change mitigation is the most effective means of maintaining forest resilience.

Notes

Funding provided by: European Research Council
ROR ID: https://ror.org/0472cxd90
Award Number: 101001905

Funding provided by: Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
ROR ID: https://ror.org/03frj4r98
Award Number: JPMXD0722678534

Funding provided by: Japan Science and Technology Agency
ROR ID: https://ror.org/00097mb19
Award Number: JPMJRS23I4

Funding provided by: Japan Science and Technology Agency
ROR ID: https://ror.org/00097mb19
Award Number: JPMJRX21I4

Funding provided by: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
ROR ID: https://ror.org/00hhkn466
Award Number: 22KK0102

Funding provided by: National Park Service
ROR ID: https://ror.org/044zqqy65
Award Number:

Funding provided by: University of Wisconsin–Madison
ROR ID: https://ror.org/01y2jtd41
Award Number:

Funding provided by: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
ROR ID: https://ror.org/00hhkn466
Award Number:

Methods

The dataset was simulated using the individual-based forest landscape and disturbance model iLand (Model page).

 

Files

iLand_project_berchtesgaden.zip

Files (19.5 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:5865c468142db6ca0e2b27145a211a97
7.9 GB Preview Download
md5:e871cf62824e00642cf2e896f855db49
2.9 GB Preview Download
md5:507bf0bd728d1db5a7e9121c1c11377c
8.7 GB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is derived from
10.5061/dryad.pc866t1zt (DOI)