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A new model to simulate climate-change impacts on forest succession for local land management

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Title A new model to simulate climate-change impacts on forest succession for local land management
Names Yospin, Gabriel I. (creator)
Bridgham, Scott D. (creator)
Neilson, Ronald P. (creator)
Bolte, John P. (creator)
et al. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-01 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Ecological Society of America and can be found at: http://www.esajournals.org/loi/ecap.
Abstract We developed a new climate-sensitive vegetation state-and-transition simulation
model (CV-STSM) to simulate future vegetation at a fine spatial grain commensurate
with the scales of human land-use decisions, and under the joint influences of changing
climate, site productivity, and disturbance. CV-STSM integrates outputs from four different
modeling systems. Successional changes in tree species composition and stand structure were
represented as transition probabilities and organized into a state-and-transition simulation
model. States were characterized based on assessments of both current vegetation and of
projected future vegetation from a dynamic global vegetation model (DGVM). State
definitions included sufficient detail to support the integration of CV-STSM with an agent-based
model of land-use decisions and a mechanistic model of fire behavior and spread.
Transition probabilities were parameterized using output from a stand biometric model run
across a wide range of site productivities. Biogeographic and biogeochemical projections from
the DGVM were used to adjust the transition probabilities to account for the impacts of
climate change on site productivity and potential vegetation type. We conducted experimental
simulations in the Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA. Our simulation landscape incorporated
detailed new assessments of critically imperiled Oregon white oak (Quercus garryana) savanna
and prairie habitats among the suite of existing and future vegetation types. The experimental
design fully crossed four future climate scenarios with three disturbance scenarios. CV-STSM
showed strong interactions between climate and disturbance scenarios. All disturbance
scenarios increased the abundance of oak savanna habitat, but an interaction between the
most intense disturbance and climate-change scenarios also increased the abundance of
subtropical tree species. Even so, subtropical tree species were far less abundant at the end of
simulations in CV-STSM than in the dynamic global vegetation model simulations. Our
results indicate that dynamic global vegetation models may overestimate future rates of
vegetation change, especially in the absence of stand-replacing disturbances. Modeling tools
such as CV-STSM that simulate rates and direction of vegetation change affected by
interactions and feedbacks between climate and land-use change can help policy makers, land
managers, and society as a whole develop effective plans to adapt to rapidly changing climate.
Genre Article
Topic Agent-based model
Identifier Yospin, G. I., Bridgham, S. D., Neilson, R. P., Bolte, J. P., Bachelet, D. M., Gould, P. J., ... & Johnson, B. R. (2015). A new model to simulate climate-change impacts on forest succession for local land management. Ecological Applications, 25(1), 226-242. doi:10.1890/13-0906.1

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