Abstract

The understanding of spatial distribution patterns of native riparian tree species in Europe lacks accurate species distribution models (SDMs), since riparian forest habitats have a limited spatial extent and are strongly related to the associated watercourses, which needs to be represented in the environmental predictors. However, SDMs are urgently needed for adapting forest management to climate change, as well as for conservation and restoration of riparian forest ecosystems. For such an operative use, standard large-scale bioclimatic models alone are too coarse and frequently exclude relevant predictors. In this study, we compare a bioclimatic continent-wide model and a regional model based on climate, soil, and river data for central to south-eastern Europe, targeting seven riparian foundation species—Alnus glutinosa, Fraxinus angustifolia, F. excelsior, Populus nigra, Quercus robur, Ulmus laevis, and U. minor. The results emphasize the high importance of precise occurrence data and environmental predictors. Soil predictors were more important than bioclimatic variables, and river variables were partly of the same importance. In both models, five of the seven species were found to decrease in terms of future occurrence probability within the study area, whereas the results for two species were ambiguous. Nevertheless, both models predicted a dangerous loss of occurrence probability for economically and ecologically important tree species, likely leading to significant effects on forest composition and structure, as well as on provided ecosystem services.

Highlights

  • IntroductionHuman-driven environmental impacts caused by climate change and globalization threaten forest ecosystems [1]

  • This article is an open access articleHuman-driven environmental impacts caused by climate change and globalization threaten forest ecosystems [1]

  • We developed two types of species distribution models (SDMs) incorporating climate, soil, and river data to identify expected regional as well as large-scale changes to species distributions caused by environmental changes

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Summary

Introduction

Human-driven environmental impacts caused by climate change and globalization threaten forest ecosystems [1]. This may lead to reduced habitat suitability for local forest communities [2], increased risks of climate interactions between native pests and diseases [3,4], and intensified disturbance events such as storms [5], droughts [6,7,8], and floods [9,10,11]. Groundwater extraction affects the water availability [28] These modifications to the water supply have crucial long-term effects on natural floodplain forests [29]. Climate change’ morphological and hydrological modifications [20,26]; and the spread of non-native plants [35], pests, and pathogens [37,38] can have massive ecological effects and fundamentally influence the provision of ecosystem services [21,39,40,41]

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