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Trade-offs between plant species richness and carbon storage in the context of afforestation – Examples from afforestation scenarios in the Mulde Basin, Germany

Lautenbach, Sven ; Jungandreas, Anne ; Blanke, Jan LU ; Lehsten, Veiko LU ; Mühlner, Susanne ; Kühn, Ingolf and Volk, Martin (2017) In Ecological Indicators 73. p.139-155
Abstract

The German Federal State of Saxony aims to increase forest cover, supported by the implementation of afforestation programs. To analyze consequences of an increase in forest cover, this study investigates possible trade-offs between carbon storage and plant biodiversity caused by afforestation. Six afforestation scenarios with total forest cover ranging from 27.7% to 46% were generated in the Mulde river basin in Saxony with regard to different forest types. Carbon storage was calculated by the process-based Dynamic Vegetation Model LPJ-GUESS while random forest models were used to predict changes in plant species richness. We used eight different plant groups as responses: total number of plant species, endangered species, as well as... (More)

The German Federal State of Saxony aims to increase forest cover, supported by the implementation of afforestation programs. To analyze consequences of an increase in forest cover, this study investigates possible trade-offs between carbon storage and plant biodiversity caused by afforestation. Six afforestation scenarios with total forest cover ranging from 27.7% to 46% were generated in the Mulde river basin in Saxony with regard to different forest types. Carbon storage was calculated by the process-based Dynamic Vegetation Model LPJ-GUESS while random forest models were used to predict changes in plant species richness. We used eight different plant groups as responses: total number of plant species, endangered species, as well as species grouped by native status (three groups) and pollination traits (three groups). Afforestation led to an increase in carbon storage that was slightly stronger in coniferous forests as compared to deciduous forests. The relationship between plant species richness and afforestation was context dependent. Species richness showed a non-linear relationship with forest cover share. The relationship was influenced by shares of land use types, climatic conditions and land use configuration expressed by the number of land use patches. The effect of forest type on plant species richness was marginal. On average the relationship between carbon storage and plant species richness was synergistic for most plant groups. However, the relationship between change in species richness and change in carbon storage varied across space. This changing relationship was used to identify priority areas for afforestation. The different plant groups responded differently to an increase in forest cover. The change in species richness for Red List species was relatively distinct from the other species groups. Neophytes and archeophytes (i.e. alien plant species introduced after and before the discovery of the Americas) showed a similar response to the afforestation scenarios. While afforestation had overall positive effects both on plant species richness and carbon storage, a number of locations were identified for which afforestation would lead to a decrease in plant species richness. Spatial planning should therefore avoid afforestation at these locations.

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author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Biodiversity, Carbon storage, Ecosystem services, Land use change simulation, LPJ-GUESS, Plant species richness, Random forest, Species richness modeling, Trade-offs
in
Ecological Indicators
volume
73
pages
17 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:84988701357
  • wos:000398334400016
ISSN
1470-160X
DOI
10.1016/j.ecolind.2016.09.035
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f5acbfa1-2161-422e-a1dc-286fc96b0baf
date added to LUP
2016-10-18 13:25:14
date last changed
2024-04-19 10:47:13
@article{f5acbfa1-2161-422e-a1dc-286fc96b0baf,
  abstract     = {{<p>The German Federal State of Saxony aims to increase forest cover, supported by the implementation of afforestation programs. To analyze consequences of an increase in forest cover, this study investigates possible trade-offs between carbon storage and plant biodiversity caused by afforestation. Six afforestation scenarios with total forest cover ranging from 27.7% to 46% were generated in the Mulde river basin in Saxony with regard to different forest types. Carbon storage was calculated by the process-based Dynamic Vegetation Model LPJ-GUESS while random forest models were used to predict changes in plant species richness. We used eight different plant groups as responses: total number of plant species, endangered species, as well as species grouped by native status (three groups) and pollination traits (three groups). Afforestation led to an increase in carbon storage that was slightly stronger in coniferous forests as compared to deciduous forests. The relationship between plant species richness and afforestation was context dependent. Species richness showed a non-linear relationship with forest cover share. The relationship was influenced by shares of land use types, climatic conditions and land use configuration expressed by the number of land use patches. The effect of forest type on plant species richness was marginal. On average the relationship between carbon storage and plant species richness was synergistic for most plant groups. However, the relationship between change in species richness and change in carbon storage varied across space. This changing relationship was used to identify priority areas for afforestation. The different plant groups responded differently to an increase in forest cover. The change in species richness for Red List species was relatively distinct from the other species groups. Neophytes and archeophytes (i.e. alien plant species introduced after and before the discovery of the Americas) showed a similar response to the afforestation scenarios. While afforestation had overall positive effects both on plant species richness and carbon storage, a number of locations were identified for which afforestation would lead to a decrease in plant species richness. Spatial planning should therefore avoid afforestation at these locations.</p>}},
  author       = {{Lautenbach, Sven and Jungandreas, Anne and Blanke, Jan and Lehsten, Veiko and Mühlner, Susanne and Kühn, Ingolf and Volk, Martin}},
  issn         = {{1470-160X}},
  keywords     = {{Biodiversity; Carbon storage; Ecosystem services; Land use change simulation; LPJ-GUESS; Plant species richness; Random forest; Species richness modeling; Trade-offs}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{02}},
  pages        = {{139--155}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Ecological Indicators}},
  title        = {{Trade-offs between plant species richness and carbon storage in the context of afforestation – Examples from afforestation scenarios in the Mulde Basin, Germany}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2016.09.035}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ecolind.2016.09.035}},
  volume       = {{73}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}