Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

The anthropogenic imprint on temperate and boreal forest demography and carbon turnover

Pugh, Thomas A.M. LU ; Seidl, Rupert ; Liu, Daijun ; Lindeskog, Mats LU ; Chini, Louise P. and Senf, Cornelius (2024) In Global Ecology and Biogeography 33(1). p.100-115
Abstract

Aim: The sweeping transformation of the biosphere by humans over the last millennia leaves only limited windows into its natural state. Much of the forests that dominated temperate and southern boreal regions have been lost and those that remain typically bear a strong imprint of forestry activities and past land-use change, which have changed forest age structure and composition. Here, we ask how would the dynamics, structure and function of temperate and boreal forests differ in the absence of forestry and the legacies of land-use change?. Location: Global. Time Period: 2001–2014, integrating over the legacy of disturbance events from 1875 to 2014. Major Taxa Studied: Trees. Methods: We constructed an empirical model of natural... (More)

Aim: The sweeping transformation of the biosphere by humans over the last millennia leaves only limited windows into its natural state. Much of the forests that dominated temperate and southern boreal regions have been lost and those that remain typically bear a strong imprint of forestry activities and past land-use change, which have changed forest age structure and composition. Here, we ask how would the dynamics, structure and function of temperate and boreal forests differ in the absence of forestry and the legacies of land-use change?. Location: Global. Time Period: 2001–2014, integrating over the legacy of disturbance events from 1875 to 2014. Major Taxa Studied: Trees. Methods: We constructed an empirical model of natural disturbance probability as a function of community traits and climate, based on observed disturbance rate and form across 77 protected forest landscapes distributed across three continents. Coupling this within a dynamic vegetation model simulating forest composition and structure, we generated estimates of stand-replacing disturbance return intervals in the absence of forestry for northern hemisphere temperate and boreal forests. We then applied this model to calculate forest stand age structure and carbon turnover rates. Results: Comparison with observed disturbance rates revealed human activities to have almost halved the median return interval of stand-replacing disturbances across temperate forest, with more moderate changes in the boreal region. The resulting forests are typically much younger, especially in northern Europe and south-eastern North America, resulting in a 32% reduction in vegetation carbon turnover time across temperate forests and a 7% reduction for boreal forests. Conclusions: The current northern hemisphere temperate forest age structure is dramatically out of equilibrium with its natural disturbance regimes. Shifts towards more nature-based approaches to forest policy and management should more explicitly consider the current disturbance surplus, as it substantially impacts carbon dynamics and litter (including deadwood) stocks.

(Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
carbon cycle, forest demography, forest disturbance, forest dynamics, harvest, land use
in
Global Ecology and Biogeography
volume
33
issue
1
pages
100 - 115
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85174295785
ISSN
1466-822X
DOI
10.1111/geb.13773
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors. Global Ecology and Biogeography published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
id
a5125de7-6325-44fb-b6e9-931233200b6d
date added to LUP
2023-12-18 15:27:41
date last changed
2024-01-09 15:44:33
@article{a5125de7-6325-44fb-b6e9-931233200b6d,
  abstract     = {{<p>Aim: The sweeping transformation of the biosphere by humans over the last millennia leaves only limited windows into its natural state. Much of the forests that dominated temperate and southern boreal regions have been lost and those that remain typically bear a strong imprint of forestry activities and past land-use change, which have changed forest age structure and composition. Here, we ask how would the dynamics, structure and function of temperate and boreal forests differ in the absence of forestry and the legacies of land-use change?. Location: Global. Time Period: 2001–2014, integrating over the legacy of disturbance events from 1875 to 2014. Major Taxa Studied: Trees. Methods: We constructed an empirical model of natural disturbance probability as a function of community traits and climate, based on observed disturbance rate and form across 77 protected forest landscapes distributed across three continents. Coupling this within a dynamic vegetation model simulating forest composition and structure, we generated estimates of stand-replacing disturbance return intervals in the absence of forestry for northern hemisphere temperate and boreal forests. We then applied this model to calculate forest stand age structure and carbon turnover rates. Results: Comparison with observed disturbance rates revealed human activities to have almost halved the median return interval of stand-replacing disturbances across temperate forest, with more moderate changes in the boreal region. The resulting forests are typically much younger, especially in northern Europe and south-eastern North America, resulting in a 32% reduction in vegetation carbon turnover time across temperate forests and a 7% reduction for boreal forests. Conclusions: The current northern hemisphere temperate forest age structure is dramatically out of equilibrium with its natural disturbance regimes. Shifts towards more nature-based approaches to forest policy and management should more explicitly consider the current disturbance surplus, as it substantially impacts carbon dynamics and litter (including deadwood) stocks.</p>}},
  author       = {{Pugh, Thomas A.M. and Seidl, Rupert and Liu, Daijun and Lindeskog, Mats and Chini, Louise P. and Senf, Cornelius}},
  issn         = {{1466-822X}},
  keywords     = {{carbon cycle; forest demography; forest disturbance; forest dynamics; harvest; land use}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{100--115}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Global Ecology and Biogeography}},
  title        = {{The anthropogenic imprint on temperate and boreal forest demography and carbon turnover}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/geb.13773}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/geb.13773}},
  volume       = {{33}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}