Landscape dynamics in Mediterranean oak forests under global change: understanding the role of anthropogenic and environmental drivers across forest types
-
Autor(es)"Acácio, Vanda Dias, Filipe S. Catry, Filipe X. Rocha, Marta Moreira, Francisco"
-
Instituição do Autor correspondenteCenter for Applied Ecology (CEABN/InBIO), School of Agriculture, University of Lisbon
-
ContactoEste endereço de email está protegido contra piratas. Necessita ativar o JavaScript para o visualizar.
-
Revista e nºGlobal Change Biology 23: 1199-1217
-
Ano2017
-
DOI10.1111/gcb.13487
Projeto
Fireland Project (PTDC/AGR-CFL/104651/2008)
Resumo
The Mediterranean region is projected to be extremely vulnerable to global change, which will affect the distribution of typical forest types such as native oak forests. However, our understanding of Mediterranean oak forest responses to future conditions is still very limited by the lack of knowledge on oak forest dynamics and speciesspecific responses to multiple drivers. We compared the longterm (1966–2006) forest persistence and land cover change among evergreen (cork oak and holm oak) and deciduous oak forests and evaluated the importance of anthropogenic and environmental drivers on observed changes for Portugal. We used National Forest Inventories to quantify the changes in oak forests and explored the drivers of change using multinomial logistic regression analysis and an information theoretical approach. We found distinct trends among oak forest types, reflecting the differences in oak economic value, protection status and management schemes: cork oak forests were the most persistent (62%), changing mostly to pines and eucalypt; holm oak forests were less persistent (53.2%), changing mostly to agriculture; and deciduous oak forests were the least persistent (45.7%), changing mostly to shrublands. Drivers of change had distinct importance across oak forest types, but drivers from anthropogenic origin (wildfires, population density, and land accessibility) were always among the most important. Climatic extremes were also important predictors of oak forest changes, namely extreme temperatures for evergreen oak forests and deficit of precipitation for deciduous oak forests. Our results indicate that under increasing human pressure and forecasted climate change, evergreen oak forests will continue declining and deciduous oak forests will be replaced by forests dominated by more xeric species. In the long run, multiple disturbances may change competitive dominance from oak forests to pyrophytic shrublands. A better understanding of forest dynamics and the inclusion of anthropogenic drivers on models of vegetation change will improve predicting the future of Mediterranean oak forests.
Palavras-Chave
Mediterranean ecosystems; Quercus; climate change; cork oak; deciduous oaks; holm oak; land use change; wildfire \n