Elsevier

Ecological Indicators

Volume 129, October 2021, 107915
Ecological Indicators

The interaction of land-use history and tree species diversity in driving variation in the aboveground biomass of urban versus non-urban tropical forests

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107915Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Diversity effect on aboveground biomass is dependent on forests’ land-use history and surrounding landscape matrix.

  • Disturbance can modulate the relationship between evolutionary diversity and biomass storage.

  • Evolutionary diversity is positively related to aboveground biomass only in old-growth, non-urban forests.

  • Niche complementarity leads to higher above-ground biomass in certain ecological contexts.

  • Strategies for conservation and restoration should account for past land-use and the surrounding landscape matrix.

Abstract

Understanding the drivers of aboveground biomass (AGB) variation in present-day tropical forests can contribute to management strategies that help mitigate against CO2-driven climate change and provide other services related to high AGB. Higher tree diversity can lead to higher woody productivity and carbon storage, but how diversity interacts with land-use history is less certain. We assessed variation in AGB across forests with different land-use histories and surrounding landscapes in southeastern Brazil and how AGB relates to tree diversity per se, while controlling for important factors such as mean functional trait values, stem density and soil fertility. Our findings indicate that aboveground biomass of forests is dependent on land-use history and the landscape matrix in which they occur (urban or non-urban). We found that tree diversity, measured as the average evolutionary divergence among close relatives, shows a strong positive relationship to AGB, but only in old-growth, non-urban forests. This suggests that higher niche complementarity leads to higher AGB in certain ecological contexts. Forests in an urban matrix, and those that regenerated from cropland (in an urban or non-urban matrix), showed weak or insignificant relationships between AGB and diversity, and forests that regenerated from completely denuded landscapes, including soil removal, actually showed a negative relationship between diversity and AGB. Meanwhile, across all forest classes, the abundance-weighted mean wood density of tree species present showed a consistent positive correlation with AGB, indicating the ubiquity of mass-ratio effects on AGB. Overall, our study suggests that strategies for conservation and restoration should account for past land-use and the matrix where forests are inserted, as the distribution of carbon stocks and biodiversity may need to be considered separately.

Keywords

Urbanization
Aboveground biomass
Phylogenetic diversity
Niche complementarity
Tropical forests
Land-use history

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