Climate change's effects on temperate rain forests surprisingly complex
Longer, warmer growing seasons associated with a changing
climate are altering growing conditions in temperate rain forests, but not all
plant species will be negatively affected, according to research conducted by
the U.S. Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station. Research featured
in the January 2013 issue of Science Findings -- a monthly publication of the station --
reveals a complex range of forest plant responses to a warming climate.
"
Although the overall potential for growth increases as the climate warms, we
found that plant species differ in their ability to adapt to these changing
conditions," said Tara Barrett, a research forester with the station who
led the study.
Barrett
and her colleagues explored trends in forest composition in southeastern and
south-central Alaska, home to the bulk of the world's temperate rain forests.
The researchers found an uptick in growth in higher elevations of the region
over the 13-year period, with an almost eight-percent increase in live-tree
biomass, a measure of tree growth. Individual species within the rain forest,
however, differed -- western redcedar biomass increased by four percent, while
shore pine declined by almost five percent.
As
forest managers consider climate impacts like these in the management of their
forests, scientists, including Barrett and research biologist David L.
Peterson, are communicating climate change science within the agency, helping
managers -- in Alaska and beyond -- to meet this challenge.
In
another research effort, featured in the December 2012 issue of Science
Findings, Peterson summarized the scientific basis for climate change
adaptation. He and his colleagues across the country have conducted case
studies that revealed the critical role of science-management partnerships in
adaptation planning and have produced a climate change guidebook and Web portal
for climate science information.
"
The main objective is to get science in the hands of managers so that they have
the basic information, but also have access to the documentation they need to
do their jobs," said Peterson.
Source: USDA Forest Service - Pacific Northwest Research Station
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