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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 6011, 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39019847

ABSTRACT

Herbivorous insects alter biogeochemical cycling within forests, but the magnitude of these impacts, their global variation, and drivers of this variation remain poorly understood. To address this knowledge gap and help improve biogeochemical models, we established a global network of 74 plots within 40 mature, undisturbed broadleaved forests. We analyzed freshly senesced and green leaves for carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and silica concentrations, foliar production and herbivory, and stand-level nutrient fluxes. We show more nutrient release by insect herbivores at non-outbreak levels in tropical forests than temperate and boreal forests, that these fluxes increase strongly with mean annual temperature, and that they exceed atmospheric deposition inputs in some localities. Thus, background levels of insect herbivory are sufficiently large to both alter ecosystem element cycling and influence terrestrial carbon cycling. Further, climate can affect interactions between natural populations of plants and herbivores with important consequences for global biogeochemical cycles across broadleaved forests.


Subject(s)
Forests , Herbivory , Insecta , Nitrogen , Plant Leaves , Temperature , Herbivory/physiology , Animals , Insecta/physiology , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Carbon/metabolism , Carbon Cycle , Phosphorus/metabolism , Ecosystem , Trees/metabolism
2.
Glob Chang Biol ; 26(5): 3122-3133, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32053250

ABSTRACT

Drought-related tree mortality is now a widespread phenomenon predicted to increase in magnitude with climate change. However, the patterns of which species and trees are most vulnerable to drought, and the underlying mechanisms have remained elusive, in part due to the lack of relevant data and difficulty of predicting the location of catastrophic drought years in advance. We used long-term demographic records and extensive databases of functional traits and distribution patterns to understand the responses of 20-53 species to an extreme drought in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Costa Rica, which occurred during the 2015 El Niño Southern Oscillation event. Overall, species-specific mortality rates during the drought ranged from 0% to 34%, and varied little as a function of tree size. By contrast, hydraulic safety margins correlated well with probability of mortality among species, while morphological or leaf economics spectrum traits did not. This firmly suggests hydraulic traits as targets for future research.


Subject(s)
Droughts , El Nino-Southern Oscillation , Costa Rica , Forests , Plant Leaves , Tropical Climate
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