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  • Title:  The Effects of Biotic and Abiotic Factors on the Community Dynamics in a Mountain Subtropical Forest
  • Authors: 
  • Corresponding Author:  Zhou, Tianyang; Zhang, Jiaxin; Qin, Yunzhi; Jiang, Mingxi; Qiao, Xiujuan*
  • Pubyear:  2021
  • Title of Journal:  Forests
  • Paper Code: 
  • Volume:  12
  • Number:  4
  • Page:  427
  • Others: 
  • Classification: 
  • Source: 

    Abstract:

  • From supporting wood production to mitigating climate change, forest ecosystem services are crucial to the well-being of humans. Understanding the mechanisms that drive forest dynamics can help us infer how to maintain forest ecosystem services and how to improve predictions of forest dynamics under climate change. Despite the growing number of studies exploring above ground biomass (AGB) dynamics, questions of dynamics in biodiversity and in number of individuals still remain unclear. Here, we first explored the patterns of community dynamics in different aspects (i.e., AGB, density and biodiversity) based on short-term (five years) data from a 25-ha permanent plot in a subtropical forest in central China. Second, we examined the relationships between community dynamics and biodiversity and functional traits. Third, we identified the key factors affecting different aspects of community dynamics and quantified their relative contributions. We found that in the short term (five years), net above ground biomass change (Delta AGB) and biodiversity increased, while the number of individuals decreased. Resource-conservation traits enhanced the Delta AGB and reduced the loss in individuals, while the resource-acquisition traits had the opposite effect. Furthermore, the community structure contributed the most to Delta AGB; topographic variables and soil nutrients contributed the most to the number of individuals; demographic process contributed the most to biodiversity. Our results indicate that biotic factors mostly affected the community dynamics of Delta AGB and biodiversity, while the number of individuals was mainly shaped by abiotic factors. Our work highlighted that the factors influencing different aspects of community dynamics vary. Therefore, forest management practices should be formulated according to a specific protective purpose.
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