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Trade‐offs between carbon stocks and biodiversity in European temperate forests
Authors:Francesco Maria Sabatini,Rafael Barreto de Andrade,Yoan Paillet,P  ter   dor,Christophe Bouget,Thomas Campagnaro,Fr  d  ric Gosselin,Philippe Janssen,Walter Mattioli,Juri Nascimbene,Tommaso Sitzia,Tobias Kuemmerle,Sabina Burrascano
Affiliation:Francesco Maria Sabatini,Rafael Barreto de Andrade,Yoan Paillet,Péter Ódor,Christophe Bouget,Thomas Campagnaro,Frédéric Gosselin,Philippe Janssen,Walter Mattioli,Juri Nascimbene,Tommaso Sitzia,Tobias Kuemmerle,Sabina Burrascano
Abstract:Policies to mitigate climate change and biodiversity loss often assume that protecting carbon‐rich forests provides co‐benefits in terms of biodiversity, due to the spatial congruence of carbon stocks and biodiversity at biogeographic scales. However, it remains unclear whether this holds at the scales relevant for management, and particularly large knowledge gaps exist for temperate forests and for taxa other than trees. We built a comprehensive dataset of Central European temperate forest structure and multi‐taxonomic diversity (beetles, birds, bryophytes, fungi, lichens, and plants) across 352 plots. We used Boosted Regression Trees (BRTs) to assess the relationship between above‐ground live carbon stocks and (a) taxon‐specific richness, (b) a unified multidiversity index. We used Threshold Indicator Taxa ANalysis to explore individual species’ responses to changing above‐ground carbon stocks and to detect change‐points in species composition along the carbon‐stock gradient. Our results reveal an overall weak and highly variable relationship between richness and carbon stock at the stand scale, both for individual taxonomic groups and for multidiversity. Similarly, the proportion of win‐win and trade‐off species (i.e., species favored or disadvantaged by increasing carbon stock, respectively) varied substantially across taxa. Win‐win species gradually replaced trade‐off species with increasing carbon, without clear thresholds along the above‐ground carbon gradient, suggesting that community‐level surrogates (e.g., richness) might fail to detect critical changes in biodiversity. Collectively, our analyses highlight that leveraging co‐benefits between carbon and biodiversity in temperate forest may require stand‐scale management that prioritizes either biodiversity or carbon in order to maximize co‐benefits at broader scales. Importantly, this contrasts with tropical forests, where climate and biodiversity objectives can be integrated at the stand scale, thus highlighting the need for context‐specificity when managing for multiple objectives. Accounting for critical change‐points of target taxa can help to deal with this specificity, by defining a safe operating space to manipulate carbon while avoiding biodiversity losses.
Keywords:biodiversity conservation  carbon storage  climate change mitigation  community thresholds  multi‐objective forest planning  multi‐taxonomic diversity  trade‐off species  win‐win species
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