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Context: Forest canopies shape subcanopy environments, affecting biodiversity and ecosystem processes. Empirical forest microclimate studies are often restricted to local scales and short-term effects, but forest dynamics unfold at landscape scales and over long time periods.
Objectives: We developed the first explicit and dynamic implementation of microclimate temperature buffering in a forest landscape model and investigated effects on simulated forest dynamics and outcomes.
Methods: We adapted the individual-based forest landscape and disturbance model iLand to use microclimate temperature for three processes [decomposition, bark beetle ( L.) development, and tree seedling establishment]. We simulated forest dynamics with or without microclimate temperature buffering in a temperate European mountain landscape under historical climate and disturbance conditions.
Results: Temperature buffering effects propagated from local to landscape scales. After 1,000 simulation years, average total carbon and cumulative net ecosystem productivity were 2% and 21% higher, respectively, and tree species composition differed in simulations including versus excluding microclimate buffering. When microclimate buffering was included, Norway spruce ( (L.) Karst.) increased by 9% and European beech ( L.) decreased by 12% in mean basal area share. Some effects were amplified across scales, such as a mean 16% decrease in local-scale bark beetle development rates resulting in a mean 45% decrease in landscape-scale bark beetle-caused mortality.
Conclusions: Microclimate effects on forests scaled nonlinearly from stand to landscape and days to millennia, underlining the utility of complex simulation models for dynamic upscaling in space and time. Microclimate temperature buffering can alter forest dynamics at landscape scales.
Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10980-025-02054-8.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11790809 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10980-025-02054-8 | DOI Listing |
Vet World
July 2025
Department of Animal Husbandry, Ruminant Animals and Animal Products Technologies, Faculty of Agriculture, Trakia University, 6000, Bulgaria.
Background And Aim: Rising global temperatures and increasing humidity levels are intensifying the risk of heat stress (HS) in high-yielding dairy cattle. The temperature-humidity index (THI) is a standard metric for evaluating thermal stress in livestock. This study aimed to assess seasonal and diurnal variations in temperature, relative humidity, and THI within a milking parlor and determine their compliance with established thermal comfort thresholds for dairy cows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Life Sci Technol
August 2025
Key Laboratory of Mariculture of Ministry of Education, Fisheries College, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, 266003 China.
Unlabelled: Microhabitat heterogeneity results in significant variations in the thermal environment on a small spatial scale, leading to different intensities of cold stress during extreme low-temperature events. Investigating variations in body temperature and metabolomic responses of organisms inhabiting different microhabitats emerges as an important task for understanding how organisms respond to more frequent extreme low-temperature events in the face of climate change. In the present study, we measured substrate temperature, air temperature, wind speed, light intensity, and body temperature to evaluate the relative importance of drivers that affect body temperature in different microhabitats, and determined the metabolomic responses of intertidal snails and limpets from different microhabitats (snail: exposed vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTree Physiol
September 2025
Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Oklahoma State University Stillwater, OK, USA 74078.
Forests and grasslands experience shifts in woody plant cover creating a continuum of woody plants across space. Global change accelerates this, causing many ecosystems to experience the redistribution of woody plants. There is growing interest in understanding how these ecological changes influence ecosystem function including climate regulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Equine Vet Sci
September 2025
Center for Veterinary Research and Innovation, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kasetsart University Bang Khen Campus, Bangkok 10900, Thailand; Department of Large Animal and Wildlife Clinical Science, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kasetsart University Kamphaeng Saen Campus, Nakhon Pathom 73140, Th
Background: The impact of climate conditions and stable design on horses housed in individual stalls plays a significant role in their well-being, especially in tropical climates. Limited information exists regarding their conditions during the monsoon season.
Objective: This study focused on the stable microclimate and autonomic regulation of horses kept in different stable architectures during the monsoon in a tropical setting.
Sci Total Environ
August 2025
Plants and Environmental Quality Research Group, School of Life Sciences, University of Technology Sydney, Australia. Electronic address:
Negative air ions (NAI) are negatively charged gas ions, commonly released within the natural environment via plant metabolic activity. Exposure to NAI-enriched environments has been shown to provide substantial health benefits, and the ability to charge particulate matter (PM) and precipitate it from the airstream, leading it to be proposed as potential contributors to indoor botanical air purification systems. Current literature indicates low levels of NAI production by indoor plants, while there is a general consensus that reasonable levels of NAI can be produced by plants under correct physiological and microclimate conditions, the mechanisms of plant NAI generation remain insufficiently studied.
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