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Effect of historical land‐use and climate change on tree‐climate relationships in the upper Midwestern United States
Authors:Simon J. Goring  John W. Williams
Affiliation:1. Department of Geography University of Wisconsin, Madison, Madison, WI, USA;2. Center for Climatic Research University of Wisconsin, Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Abstract:Contemporary forest inventory data are widely used to understand environmental controls on tree species distributions and to construct models to project forest responses to climate change, but the stability and representativeness of contemporary tree‐climate relationships are poorly understood. We show that tree‐climate relationships for 15 tree genera in the upper Midwestern US have significantly altered over the last two centuries due to historical land‐use and climate change. Realised niches have shifted towards higher minimum temperatures and higher rainfall. A new attribution method implicates both historical climate change and land‐use in these shifts, with the relative importance varying among genera and climate variables. Most climate/land‐use interactions are compounding, in which historical land‐use reinforces shifts in species‐climate relationships toward wetter distributions, or confounding, in which land‐use complicates shifts towards warmer distributions. Compounding interactions imply that contemporary‐based models of species distributions may underestimate species resilience to climate change.
Keywords:Anthropocene  climate change  climate disequilibrium  forest inventory and analysis (FIA)  fundamental niche  historical ecology  land‐use  niche shift  Public Land Survey System  realised niche
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