Question: Predicted changes in the frequency of short-term drought events raise concerns about potential effects of climate change on forest ecosystems. Few experiments have investigated the effects of tree species richness and composition in forest assemblages exposed to drought, and general conclusions for these systems are currently lacking. We tested the hypothesis that different species richness and composition affects community-level stability during a severe short-term drought event across a gradient of tree species assemblages typical of temperate forest ecosystems on dry substrates.Location: Great Lakes -St. Lawrence forest region, central Ontario, Canada.
Methods:The study assemblages spanned a gradient of 15 different combinations of species richness and composition of four tree species. The drought occurred in 2005 and was characterized by high growing season temperature and low precipitation. Plots (n = 63) representing replicate assemblages were selected to collect increment cores (n = 1193) and examine growth responses to past drought at the community and population levels. Cross-dated tree ring measurements were used to reconstruct basal area increment (BAI) and calculate indices of resistance, resilience and productivity over the drought period. We used hierarchical analysis of variance models to estimate the effects of species richness and composition on drought responses.
Results:We identified a significant effect of species composition on community-level resistance and productivity. White pine (Pinus strobus) abundance was associated with lower community resistance and white birch (Betula papyrifera) abundance with higher resistance. Assemblages with greater productivity were often characterized by the high abundance of trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides). There was no overall effect of the assemblage gradient on the population-level stability; however, red pine (Pinus resinosa) productivity was higher in combination with trembling aspen and white birch.
Conclusion:Our study demonstrated that species richness had no effect on the community-level stability of growth during a drought in temperate forests on dry substrates. Instead, there were important compositional effects that determine some aspects of stability during drought events. If pine forests were managed to maintain a component of deciduous species, the capacity to dampen the community-level effects of more frequent drought would increase.
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