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Reduced ecosystem resilience quantifies fine-scale heterogeneity in tropical forest mortality responses to drought.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Wu, D; Vargas G, G; Powers, JS; McDowell, NG; Becknell, JM; Pérez-Aviles, D; Medvigy, D; Liu, Y; Katul, GG; Calvo-Alvarado, JC; Calvo-Obando, A ...
Published in: Global change biology
March 2022

Sensitivity of forest mortality to drought in carbon-dense tropical forests remains fraught with uncertainty, while extreme droughts are predicted to be more frequent and intense. Here, the potential of temporal autocorrelation of high-frequency variability in Landsat Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI), an indicator of ecosystem resilience, to predict spatial and temporal variations of forest biomass mortality is evaluated against in situ census observations for 64 site-year combinations in Costa Rican tropical dry forests during the 2015 ENSO drought. Temporal autocorrelation, within the optimal moving window of 24 months, demonstrated robust predictive power for in situ mortality (leave-one-out cross-validation R2  = 0.54), which allows for estimates of annual biomass mortality patterns at 30 m resolution. Subsequent spatial analysis showed substantial fine-scale heterogeneity of forest mortality patterns, largely driven by drought intensity and ecosystem properties related to plant water use such as forest deciduousness and topography. Highly deciduous forest patches demonstrated much lower mortality sensitivity to drought stress than less deciduous forest patches after elevation was controlled. Our results highlight the potential of high-resolution remote sensing to "fingerprint" forest mortality and the significant role of ecosystem heterogeneity in forest biomass resistance to drought.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

Global change biology

DOI

EISSN

1365-2486

ISSN

1354-1013

Publication Date

March 2022

Volume

28

Issue

6

Start / End Page

2081 / 2094

Related Subject Headings

  • Trees
  • Plants
  • Forests
  • Ecosystem
  • Ecology
  • Droughts
  • Biomass
  • 41 Environmental sciences
  • 37 Earth sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences
 

Citation

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Wu, D., Vargas G, G., Powers, J. S., McDowell, N. G., Becknell, J. M., Pérez-Aviles, D., … Xu, X. (2022). Reduced ecosystem resilience quantifies fine-scale heterogeneity in tropical forest mortality responses to drought. Global Change Biology, 28(6), 2081–2094. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16046
Wu, Donghai, German Vargas G, Jennifer S. Powers, Nate G. McDowell, Justin M. Becknell, Daniel Pérez-Aviles, David Medvigy, et al. “Reduced ecosystem resilience quantifies fine-scale heterogeneity in tropical forest mortality responses to drought.Global Change Biology 28, no. 6 (March 2022): 2081–94. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16046.
Wu D, Vargas G G, Powers JS, McDowell NG, Becknell JM, Pérez-Aviles D, et al. Reduced ecosystem resilience quantifies fine-scale heterogeneity in tropical forest mortality responses to drought. Global change biology. 2022 Mar;28(6):2081–94.
Wu, Donghai, et al. “Reduced ecosystem resilience quantifies fine-scale heterogeneity in tropical forest mortality responses to drought.Global Change Biology, vol. 28, no. 6, Mar. 2022, pp. 2081–94. Epmc, doi:10.1111/gcb.16046.
Wu D, Vargas G G, Powers JS, McDowell NG, Becknell JM, Pérez-Aviles D, Medvigy D, Liu Y, Katul GG, Calvo-Alvarado JC, Calvo-Obando A, Sanchez-Azofeifa A, Xu X. Reduced ecosystem resilience quantifies fine-scale heterogeneity in tropical forest mortality responses to drought. Global change biology. 2022 Mar;28(6):2081–2094.
Journal cover image

Published In

Global change biology

DOI

EISSN

1365-2486

ISSN

1354-1013

Publication Date

March 2022

Volume

28

Issue

6

Start / End Page

2081 / 2094

Related Subject Headings

  • Trees
  • Plants
  • Forests
  • Ecosystem
  • Ecology
  • Droughts
  • Biomass
  • 41 Environmental sciences
  • 37 Earth sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences