English
 
Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT

Released

Journal Article

Loss of competitive strength in European conifer species under climate change

Authors

Grünig,  Marc
External Organizations;

Rammer,  Werner
External Organizations;

Baumann,  Martin
External Organizations;

Albrich,  Katharina
External Organizations;

André,  Frédéric
External Organizations;

Augustynczik,  Audrey L.D.
External Organizations;

Bohn,  Friedrich
External Organizations;

Bouwman,  Meike
External Organizations;

Bugmann,  Harald
External Organizations;

Collati,  Alessio
External Organizations;

Cristal,  Irina
External Organizations;

Dalmonech,  Daniela
External Organizations;

De Caceres,  Miquel
External Organizations;

De Coligny,  Francois
External Organizations;

Dobor,  Laura
External Organizations;

Dollinger,  Christina
External Organizations;

Forrester,  David I.
External Organizations;

Garcia-Gonzalo,  Jordi
External Organizations;

González-Olabarria,  José Ramón
External Organizations;

Hiltner,  Ulrike
External Organizations;

Hlásny,  Tomáš
External Organizations;

Honkaniemi,  Juha
External Organizations;

Huber,  Nico
External Organizations;

Huth,  Andreas
External Organizations;

Jonard,  Mathieu
External Organizations;

Jönsson,  Anna Maria
External Organizations;

Lagergren,  Frederik
External Organizations;

Mina,  Marco
External Organizations;

Mohren,  Frits
External Organizations;

Moos,  Christine
External Organizations;

Morin,  Xavier
External Organizations;

Muys,  Bart
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/mahnken

Nieberg,  Mats       
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Peltoniemi,  Mikko
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Reyer

Reyer,  Christopher P. O.       
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Storms,  Ilié
External Organizations;

Thom,  Dominik
External Organizations;

Toigo,  Maude
External Organizations;

Seidl,  Rupert
External Organizations;

External Resource
No external resources are shared
Fulltext (restricted access)
There are currently no full texts shared for your IP range.
Fulltext (public)
Supplementary Material (public)
There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Grünig, M., Rammer, W., Baumann, M., Albrich, K., André, F., Augustynczik, A. L., Bohn, F., Bouwman, M., Bugmann, H., Collati, A., Cristal, I., Dalmonech, D., De Caceres, M., De Coligny, F., Dobor, L., Dollinger, C., Forrester, D. I., Garcia-Gonzalo, J., González-Olabarria, J. R., Hiltner, U., Hlásny, T., Honkaniemi, J., Huber, N., Huth, A., Jonard, M., Jönsson, A. M., Lagergren, F., Mina, M., Mohren, F., Moos, C., Morin, X., Muys, B., Nieberg, M., Peltoniemi, M., Reyer, C. P. O., Storms, I., Thom, D., Toigo, M., Seidl, R. (in press): Loss of competitive strength in European conifer species under climate change. - Communications Earth and Environment.


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_34370
Abstract
Climate change is expected to alter species assemblages by affecting the outcome of competition between species. Investigating processes of competition remains challenging particularly in tree communities, as they unfold over extensive spatio-temporal scales. Here, we developed a deep-learning approach to leverage a novel database of 135 million simulated local-scale tree responses to climate across continental Europe to investigate changes in the competitiveness of nine major tree species under different scenarios of climate change. Specifically, we trained a Deep Neural Network on local process model projections to investigate climate change effects on indicators of competitive strength and species dominance. We found decreasing competitive strength for all investigated evergreen coniferous species across their distribution, while major deciduous broadleaved species such as Quercus robur and Fagus sylvatica increased in competitiveness. Changes in tree species competition with climate differed locally, but most investigated species lost competitive strength at their warm range edges. As a consequence of these changes, up to 19% of Europe’s forests could experience a change in the dominant tree species until the end of the 21st century. Our results suggest a profound climate-induced reassembly of Europe’s forests and identify areas that may require specific attention in forest policy and management.