Abstract

Tropical rainforests are subject to extensive degradation by commercial selective logging. Despite pervasive changes to forest structure, selectively logged forests represent vital refugia for global biodiversity. The ability of these forests to buffer temperature-sensitive species from climate warming will be an important determinant of their future conservation value, although this topic remains largely unexplored. Thermal buffering potential is broadly determined by: (i) the difference between the "macroclimate" (climate at a local scale, m to ha) and the "microclimate" (climate at a fine-scale, mm to m, that is distinct from the macroclimate); (ii) thermal stability of microclimates (e.g.variation in daily temperatures); and (iii) the availability of microclimates to organisms. We compared these metrics in undisturbed primary forest and intensively logged forest on Borneo, using thermal images to capture cool microclimates on the surface of the forest floor, and information from dataloggers placed inside deadwood, tree holes and leaf litter. Although major differences in forest structure remained 9-12years after repeated selective logging, we found that logging activity had very little effect on thermal buffering, in terms of macroclimate and microclimate temperatures, and the overall availability of microclimates. For 1°C warming in the macroclimate, temperature inside deadwood, tree holes and leaf litter warmed slightly more in primary forest than in logged forest, but the effect amounted to <0.1°C difference between forest types. We therefore conclude that selectively logged forests are similar to primary forests in their potential for thermal buffering, and subsequent ability to retain temperature-sensitive species under climate change. Selectively logged forests can play a crucial role in the long-term maintenance of global biodiversity.

Highlights

  • Land-use change is a profound threat to Earth’s terrestrial biodiversity (Maxwell, Fuller, Brooks, & Watson, 2016; Sala et al, 2000)

  • We predicted that logged forests would be structurally distinct from primary forest, and we tested the hypothesis that this would lead to reduced thermal buffering potential and, subsequently, impaired ability of temperature-sensitive species to respond in situ to excessively high temperatures in the wider macroclimate

  • We examined the impact of selective logging on forest structure using linear mixed effects models to compare nine structural response variables between logged and primary forests: stand basal area of trees and of saplings; the coefficient of variation across individual basal areas of trees and of saplings; proportion of trees that were dipterocarps; percentage canopy cover and percentage vegetation cover at ground, understorey and canopy strata

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Land-use change is a profound threat to Earth’s terrestrial biodiversity (Maxwell, Fuller, Brooks, & Watson, 2016; Sala et al, 2000). In primary forests and secondary forests re-growing on abandoned farmland, previous studies found that organisms— ectotherms—avoid suboptimal temperatures in the wider “macroclimate” (climate at a spatial scale of m to ha) by moving locally into “microclimates”: climate at a fine-scale, mm to m, that is distinct from the macroclimate (Gonzalez del Pliego et al, 2016; Scheffers, Brett, Diesmos, Williams, & Evans, 2014; Scheffers, Evans, Williams, & Edwards, 2014) Climate at this fine-scale is more relevant for the majority of terrestrial biodiversity, which primarily consists of smallbodied ectotherms (Nadeau, Urban, & Bridle, 2017; Potter, Arthur Woods, & Pincebourde, 2013; Suggitt et al, 2011). We predicted that logged forests would be structurally distinct from primary forest, and we tested the hypothesis that this would lead to reduced thermal buffering potential and, subsequently, impaired ability of temperature-sensitive species to respond in situ to excessively high temperatures in the wider macroclimate

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| RESULTS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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