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Modeling the impact of liana infestation on the demography and carbon cycle of tropical forests
Authors:Manfredo di Porcia e Brugnera  Flicien Meunier  Marcos Longo  Sruthi M Krishna Moorthy  Hannes De Deurwaerder  Stefan A Schnitzer  Damien Bonal  Boris Faybishenko  Hans Verbeeck
Institution:Manfredo di Porcia e Brugnera,Félicien Meunier,Marcos Longo,Sruthi M. Krishna Moorthy,Hannes De Deurwaerder,Stefan A. Schnitzer,Damien Bonal,Boris Faybishenko,Hans Verbeeck
Abstract:There is mounting empirical evidence that lianas affect the carbon cycle of tropical forests. However, no single vegetation model takes into account this growth form, although such efforts could greatly improve the predictions of carbon dynamics in tropical forests. In this study, we incorporated a novel mechanistic representation of lianas in a dynamic global vegetation model (the Ecosystem Demography Model). We developed a liana‐specific plant functional type and mechanisms representing liana–tree interactions (such as light competition, liana‐specific allometries, and attachment to host trees) and parameterized them according to a comprehensive literature meta‐analysis. We tested the model for an old‐growth forest (Paracou, French Guiana) and a secondary forest (Gigante Peninsula, Panama). The resulting model simulations captured many features of the two forests characterized by different levels of liana infestation as revealed by a systematic comparison of the model outputs with empirical data, including local census data from forest inventories, eddy flux tower data, and terrestrial laser scanner‐derived forest vertical structure. The inclusion of lianas in the simulations reduced the secondary forest net productivity by up to 0.46 tC ha?1 year?1, which corresponds to a limited relative reduction of 2.6% in comparison with a reference simulation without lianas. However, this resulted in significantly reduced accumulated above‐ground biomass after 70 years of regrowth by up to 20 tC/ha (19% of the reference simulation). Ultimately, the simulated negative impact of lianas on the total biomass was almost completely cancelled out when the forest reached an old‐growth successional stage. Our findings suggest that lianas negatively influence the forest potential carbon sink strength, especially for young, disturbed, liana‐rich sites. In light of the critical role that lianas play in the profound changes currently experienced by tropical forests, this new model provides a robust numerical tool to forecast the impact of lianas on tropical forest carbon sinks.
Keywords:carbon dynamics  dynamic global vegetation model  ecology  lianas  plant functional type  tropical forest
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