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Forests harbour large spatiotemporal heterogeneity in canopy structure. This variation drives the microclimate and light availability at the forest floor. So far, we do not know how light availability and sub-canopy temperature interactively mediate the impact of macroclimate warming on understorey communities. We therefore assessed the functional response of understorey plant communities to warming and light addition in a full factorial experiment installed in temperate deciduous forests across Europe along natural microclimate, light and macroclimate gradients. Furthermore, we related these functional responses to the species' life-history syndromes and thermal niches. We found no significant community responses to the warming treatment. The light treatment, however, had a stronger impact on communities, mainly due to responses by fast-colonizing generalists and not by slow-colonizing forest specialists. The forest structure strongly mediated the response to light addition and also had a clear impact on functional traits and total plant cover. The effects of short-term experimental warming were small and suggest a time-lag in the response of understorey species to climate change. Canopy disturbance, for instance due to drought, pests or logging, has a strong and immediate impact and particularly favours generalists in the understorey in structurally complex forests.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.17803 | DOI Listing |
Front Microbiol
August 2025
Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom.
Tropical rainforests support critical biogeochemical cycles regulated by complex plant-soil microbial interactions but are threatened by global change. Much of the uniquely biodiverse and carbon rich forest on Borneo has been lost through extensive conversion to monoculture plantation, and a significant proportion of the remaining forest has been heavily modified by selective logging. Ecological restoration of tropical forest aims to return forests to a near pristine state, but restoration initiatives are hindered by limited understanding of the underpinning plant-soil feedbacks, and impacts on soil microbial communities are unresolved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
July 2025
CNRS, IRD, IMBE Aix Marseille Univ, Avignon Univ Marseille France.
Timber production is one of the most important ecosystem services provided by hardwood forests, but clear-cutting causes severe soil disturbance. There is a current need to develop alternative forest management practices to clear-cutting in order to simultaneously promote timber production, preserve biodiversity and enhance forest health and economic value. Here, we experimentally manipulated a forest to evaluate the effects of a thinning gradient (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anim Ecol
July 2025
Department of Plant Sciences and Centre for Global Wood Security, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Selective logging is a major driver of tropical land-use change, causing reductions in forest specialist species with concurrent increases in edge-tolerant species. A key question is understanding how selective logging impacts co-occurrence and assembly mechanisms in vertebrate communities as forests recover post-logging. Using a 10-year, repeat-sample study of understorey bird species in Borneo, we compare the structure of species co-occurrences over time between old-growth unlogged and logged forests, investigating the roles of functional traits and local abundance in driving co-occurrence patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Biol (Stuttg)
June 2025
Ecosystem Physiology, Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources, University Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Recent hot-dry events have caused significant impacts and legacy effects in temperate ecosystems. Here, we investigate legacy effects of the 2018 hot drought on a Pinus sylvestris L. forest in southwestern Germany and the effects of post-2018 recurrent hot-droughts on ecosystem carbon fluxes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNaturwissenschaften
May 2025
School of Biology, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Thiruvananthapuram, Thiruvananthapuram, India.
Miniaturisation can influence the foraging behaviour of flower visitors by shaping their sensory systems, flight capabilities, and their compatibility with floral shapes and structures. For bees, vision is a primary sensory modality, and a reduction in eye size compromises the resolution and sensitivity of vision. In Tetragonula iridipennis, a diminutive tropical stingless bee common in South Asia, we addressed the following questions: (a) Since flight capabilities are correlated with body size, does it largely utilise resources from understorey plants? (b) Does their small body size permit the utilisation of flowers with diverse morphologies? Further, we explored floral colour in relation to bee colour vision by examining if: (c) the distribution of marker points of the community floral spectra (n = 182 species) corresponds with bee photoreceptor sensitivities and (d) the colours of flowers visited or not visited by T.
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