Dear all,


The International Tree Mortality Network, an initiative of the IUFRO task force on monitoring trends and patterns in global tree mortality, continues the online seminar series on March 15, 4 pm CET, with:

Bonaventure Ntirugulirwa

Title:
Mortality of Afrotropical trees in a temperature manipulation experiment: Result from the Rwanda TREE project

Abstract: Knowledge on mortality responses of tropical trees and communities under projected warmer climate is limited. Trees in tropical montane forests (TMFs) are considered particularly vulnerable to climate change, but this hypothesis remains poorly evaluated due to data scarcity. To reduce the knowledge gap on the warming response of TMFs, we have established a field experiment along an elevation gradient ranging from 2400 m a.s.l. (15.2 °C mean temperature) to 1300 m a.s.l. (20.6 °C mean temperature) in Rwanda. Twenty tree species, native to East and Central Africa, from two forest types of origin (transitional rainforest at 1600 – 2000 m a.s.l, and TMF at 2000 – 3000 m a.s.l.) and two successional groups, early (ES) and late succession (LS), were planted in multispecies plots at three sites along the gradient. Tree growth and survival of 5400 trees was monitored regularly over two years. The results showed that ES trees from lower elevations grew faster at warmer sites while several of the LS species, especially from higher elevations, did not respond or grew slower. Moreover, tree mortality increased in a warmer climate and this was more pronounced in high-elevation and LS species compared to lower-elevation and ES tree species. ES species with transitional rainforest origin strongly increased in proportion of stand basal area at warmer sites, while tropical montane forest species declined, suggesting that higher-elevation and LS species are at risk to be outcompeted by lower-elevation and ES species in a warmer climate. We conclude that tree mortality and growth responses combined may lead to modified tree community composition in a warmer climate, favouring lower-elevation and ES tree species. This has important implications for biodiversity and carbon storage of Afromontane forests.

Bio: Bonaventure Ntirugulirwa is a research fellow in the Forest Productivity and Improvement Program at the Rwanda Forestry Authority of the Ministry of Environment in Rwanda. He is a PhD candidate at the University of Rwanda and at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden. His research focus are native tree species, their relation to ecological regions, and the influence of climate change on growth and mortality.

Note that the talks might be recorded.

Previous seminars:
Seminar # 1: Matt Hansen - Global forest monitoring using satellite data
https://youtu.be/snUSGNb9bAQ

Seminar # 2: Flavia Costa - Tree mortality in the Amazon across local hydrological gradients: how water table depth may save or condemn trees as climate changes
https://youtu.be/5wmzX9ldn4Q

Seminar #3: Belinda Medlyn - Tree mortality in Australian ecosystems: past, present and future
https://youtu.be/T6S9VKklbyc


Seminar #4: Nate McDowell - Rising tree mortality in the Anthropocene

Seminar #5: Lisa Hülsmann - Tree mortality modeling – a tool for ecological inference and a challenge for projecting forest dynamics

Seminar #6: Craig D Allen - The global emergence of hotter-drought drivers of forest disturbance tipping points

Seminar #7: Yude Pan - Impacts of disturbances on leaf area index and productivity of terrestrial ecosystems

Seminar #8: Viacheslav Kharuk - Conifer decline and mortality in Siberia

Seminar #9: Barbara Bentz - Recipes for Climate-Induced Bark Beetle-Caused Tree Mortality

Seminar #10: Ana Bastos - Climate variability, extremes, and attribution of high-impact ecological events: challenges and ways forward




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Dr. (habil.) Henrik Hartmann

Group leader

Plant Allocation

 

MPI for Biogeochemistry

Hans Knöll Str. 10

07745 Jena, Germany

 

 

Contact:  hhart@bgc-jena.mpg.de

Phone:    +49.3641.576294

Mobile:  +49.171.8188273

Website: https://www.bgc-jena.mpg.de/bgp/index.php/HenrikHartmann/HenrikHartmann

 

Initiatives:

International Tree Mortality Network

https://www.tree-mortality.net/

 

IUFRO Task Force on monitoring of global tree mortality patterns and trends

https://www.iufro.org/science/task-forces/tree-mortality-patterns/


https://www.tree-mortality.net/