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 join on June 22, 5 pm
CEST, with:
Dr. Craig D. Allen
Title: The global emergence of hotter-drought drivers of
forest disturbance tipping points
Abstract: Current research is presented on global-scale
patterns and trends of forest responses to increasingly hotter
droughts, particularly extensive tree mortality and forest
die-offs involving a range of interactive disturbances (e.g.,
water stress, insect outbreaks, high-severity wildfire).
Diverse cross-scale observations and empirical findings
increasingly indicate that amelioration of hotter-drought
stress via fertilization of photosynthesis from elevated
atmospheric CO2 concentrations may soon be overwhelmed by heat
and accelerated atmospheric drought. These findings highlight
some current challenges in realistically projecting the future
of global forest ecosystems (and their associated carbon pools
and fluxes) with process-based Earth system models. In
particular there is substantial evidence that forests
dominated by larger, older trees may be disproportionately
vulnerable to increased growth stress and mortality under
hotter-drought conditions. The fates of these old trees in
response to global change are of vital importance, given that
they are essential as: a) disproportionately large carbon
sinks; b) among the most biodiverse and rare terrestrial
ecosystems; c) irreplaceable archives of environmental
history; and d) venerated for many cultural reasons. Key
scientific uncertainties that impede modeling progress are
outlined, and examples of promising empirical modeling
approaches are illustrated.
Bio: Craig D. Allen is an adjunct professor in the
Department of Geography & Environmental Studies at the
University of New Mexico. He recently retired as a research
ecologist and founding leader of the New Mexico Landscapes
Field Station for the U.S. Geological Survey, based at
Bandelier National Monument in the Jemez Mountains of northern
New Mexico, where he has conducted ecological research since
1981. Craig conducts place-based, long-term research on the
ecology and environmental history of southwestern US
landscapes, and the responses of western US mountain
ecosystems and forests globally to climate change, with many
international collaborations. Since 1986 his office has been
co-located with land managers at Bandelier National Monument
where he continues to collaboratively volunteer, reflecting
his commitment to provide scientific and technical support to
diverse land management agencies, Native American tribes, and
governmental and non-governmental organizations. Craig
received B.S. and M.S. degrees in Geography from the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, and a Ph.D. in Wildland
Resource Science (forest & landscape ecology, conservation
biology) from the University of California-Berkeley. He is an
elected fellow of the Ecological Society of America (ESA) and
the American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS).
Please register for the Zoom Webinar:
---
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/