Identifying drivers of forest resilience in long-term records from the Neotropics

Authors
  • J.C. Berrío
  • G. Dominguez-Vázquez
  • B. Figueroa-Rangel
  • Z. Gonzalez-Carranza
  • G.A. Islebe
  • H. Hooghiemstra
  • H. Neff
  • M. Olvera-Vargas
  • B. Whitney
  • M.J. Wooller
  • K.J. Willis
Publication date 04-2020
Journal Biology Letters
Article number 20200005
Volume | Issue number 16 | 4
Number of pages 7
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract

Here, we use 30 long-term, high-resolution palaeoecological records from Mexico, Central and South America to address two hypotheses regarding possible drivers of resilience in tropical forests as measured in terms of recovery rates from previous disturbances. First, we hypothesize that faster recovery rates are associated with regions of higher biodiversity, as suggested by the insurance hypothesis. And second, that resilience is due to intrinsic abiotic factors that are location specific, thus regions presently displaying resilience in terms of persistence to current climatic disturbances should also show higher recovery rates in the past. To test these hypotheses, we applied a threshold approach to identify past disturbances to forests within each sequence. We then compared the recovery rates to these events with pollen richness before the event. We also compared recovery rates of each site with a measure of present resilience in the region as demonstrated by measuring global vegetation persistence to climatic perturbations using satellite imagery. Preliminary results indeed show a positive relationship between pre-disturbance taxonomic richness and faster recovery rates. However, there is less evidence to support the concept that resilience is intrinsic to a region; patterns of resilience apparent in ecosystems presently are not necessarily conservative through time.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Related dataset Identifying drivers of forest resilience in long-term records from the Neotropics
Published at https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2020.0005
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85082791849
Permalink to this page
Back