...
首页> 外文期刊>Global change biology >Scaling up the diversity-resilience relationship with traitdatabases and remote sensing data: the recovery ofproductivity after wildfire
【24h】

Scaling up the diversity-resilience relationship with traitdatabases and remote sensing data: the recovery ofproductivity after wildfire

机译:与特征数据库和遥感数据扩大多样性-复原力关系:野火后生产力的恢复

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

Understanding the mechanisms underlying ecosystem resilience - why some systems have an irreversible response to disturbances while others recover - is critical for conserving biodiversity and ecosystem function in the face of global change. Despite the widespread acceptance of a positive relationship between biodiversity and resilience, empirical evidence for this relationship remains fairly limited in scope and localized in scale. Assessing resilience at the large landscape and regional scales most relevant to land management and conservation practices has been limited by the ability to measure both diversity and resilience over large spatial scales. Here, we combined tools used in large-scale studies of biodiversity (remote sensing and trait databases) with theoretical advances developed from small-scale experiments to ask whether the functional diversity within a range of woodland and forest ecosystems influences the recovery of productivity after wildfires across the four-corner region of the United States. We additionally asked how environmental variation (topography, macroclimate) across this geographic region influences such resilience, either directly or indirectly via changes in functional diversity. Using path analysis, we found that functional diversity in regeneration traits (fire tolerance, fire resistance, resprout ability) was a stronger predictor of the recovery of productivity after wildfire than the functional diversity of seed mass or species richness. Moreover, slope, elevation, and aspect either directly or indirectly influenced the recovery of productivity, likely via their effect on microclimate, while macroclimate had no direct or indirect effects. Our study provides some of the first direct empirical evidence for functional diversity increasing resilience at large spatial scales. Our approach highlights the power of combining theory based on local-scale studies with tools used in studies at large spatial scales and trait databases to understand pressing environmental issues.
机译:理解生态系统弹性的潜在机制-为什么某些系统对干扰具有不可逆转的响应,而另一些系统却能恢复-对于面对全球变化保护生物多样性和生态系统功能至关重要。尽管人们广泛接受了生物多样性与复原力之间的积极关系,但这种关系的经验证据在范围和规模上仍然相当有限。在大型景观和区域尺度上与土地管理和保护实践最相关的复原力评估受到在大型空间尺度上测量多样性和复原力的能力的限制。在这里,我们将大规模生物多样性研究中使用的工具(遥感和特征数据库)与小规模实验的理论进展相结合,以询问森林和森林生态系统范围内的功能多样性是否会影响野火后生产力的恢复遍及美国的四角区域。我们还询问了该地理区域内的环境变化(地形,宏观气候)如何通过功能多样性的变化直接或间接影响这种弹性。使用路径分析,我们发现,再生性状的功能多样性(耐火性,耐火性,发芽能力)比种子质量或物种丰富度的功能多样性更能预测野火后生产力的恢复。而且,坡度,高程和坡向可能直接或间接地影响了生产力的恢复,很可能是由于它们对小气候的影响,而大气候却没有直接或间接的影响。我们的研究为功能多样性在大空间尺度上增强适应力提供了一些直接的直接经验证据。我们的方法强调了将基于局部研究的理论与用于大型空间研究和特征数据库的工具相结合以理解紧迫的环境问题的力量。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号