BIODIVERSITY AND LAND-USE IMPACTS ON TROPICAL ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION (BALI)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Geosciences

Abstract

Anthropogenic disturbance and land-use change in the tropics is leading to irrevocable changes in biodiversity and substantial shifts in ecosystem biogeochemistry. Yet, we still have a poor understanding of how human-driven changes in biodiversity feed back to alter biogeochemical processes. This knowledge gap substantially restricts our ability to model and predict the response of tropical ecosystems to current and future environmental change. There are a number of critical challenges to our understanding of how changes in biodiversity may alter ecosystem processes in the tropics; namely: (i) how the high taxonomic diversity of the tropics is linked to ecosystem functioning, (ii) how changes in the interactions among trophic levels and taxonomic groups following disturbance impacts upon functional diversity and biogeochemistry, and (iii) how plot-level measurements can be used to scale to whole landscapes. We have formed a consortium to address these critical challenges to launch a large-scale, replicated, and fully integrated study that brings together a multi-disciplinary team with the skills and expertise to study the necessary taxonomic and trophic groups, different biogeochemical processes, and the complex interactions amongst them.

To understand and quantify the effects of land-use change on the activity of focal biodiversity groups and how this impacts biogeochemistry, we will: (i) analyse pre-existing data on distributions of focal biodiversity groups; (ii) sample the landscape-scale treatments at the Stability of Altered Forest Ecosystems (SAFE) Project site (treatments include forest degradation, fragmentation, oil palm conversion) and key auxiliary sites (Maliau Basin - old growth on infertile soils, Lambir Hills - old growth on fertile soils, Sabah Biodiversity Experiment - rehabilitated forest, INFAPRO-FACE - rehabilitated forest); and (iii) implement new experiments that manipulate key components of biodiversity and pathways of belowground carbon flux.

The manipulations will focus on trees and lianas, mycorrhizal fungi, termites and ants, because these organisms are the likely agents of change for biogeochemical cycling in human-modified tropical forests. We will use a combination of cutting-edge techniques to test how these target groups of organisms interact each other to affect biogeochemical cycling. We will additionally collate and analyse archived data on other taxa, including vertebrates of conservation concern. The key unifying concept is the recognition that so-called 'functional traits' play a key role in linking taxonomic diversity to ecosystem function. We will focus on identifying key functional traits associated with plants, and how they vary in abundance along the disturbance gradient at SAFE. In particular, we propose that leaf functional traits (e.g. physical and chemical recalcitrance, nitrogen content, etc.) play a pivotal role in determining key ecosystem processes and also strongly influence atmospheric composition. Critically, cutting-edge airborne remote sensing techniques suggest it is possible to map leaf functional traits, chemistry and physiology at landscape-scales, and so we will use these novel airborne methods to quantify landscape-scale patterns of forest degradation, canopy structure, biogeochemical cycling and tree distributions. Process-based mathematical models will then be linked to the remote sensing imagery and ground-based measurements of functional diversity and biogeochemical cycling to upscale our findings over disturbance gradients.

Planned Impact

his work will be of interest to a broad group of academics such as:

1. Ecological theoreticians, especially in the context of biodiversity-ecosystem functioning
Our manipulative experiments will enable interactions among key organisms to be tested under field conditions.

2. Biogeochemical modellers of forest ecosystems
We will amass a comprehensive dataset used to develop and link existing models of trace gas fluxces in tropical forests.

3. Plant ecophysiologists
We will collate an extensive dataset on plant traits across the SAFE disturbance gradient.
Our manipulate experiments will also use in situ stable isotope labelling to test how plant functional type affects pathways of belowground carbon flux.

4. Soil fungal ecologists, especially with an interst in mycorrhizae
Our manipulative experiments will provide extensive data on the contribution made by external fungal mycelium of both ectomycorrhizas, which associate with heavily-logged dipterocarps, and arbuscular mycorrhizas, which associate with understorey plants.

5. Soil scientists
We will obtain a range of data on soil processes such as nutrient mineralisation and nutrient status and other soil properties in response to experimental manipulations and land-use change.

6. Atmospheric chemists
We will provide unique data obtained at scales from the plot, ecosystem to landdscape. These data will enable us to link disturbance intensity to atmospheric chemistry.

7. Invertebrate ecologists
Our consortium will analyse how human modification has affected invertebrate communities in soil and litter, and the manipulations will test how these changes interact with other focal biodiversity groups.

8. Conservationists
We will investigate how the distribution and abundance of species of conservation concern are related to human modification of forests, and the key biogeochemical processes they undertake. The consortium will provide a rigorous understanding of how human modificationof forests affects a broad range of key ecosystem processes.

9. Technologists
We will use a range of cutting-edge technologies under challenging conditions that will contribute to their further development and refinement for future generations of scientists.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Research is in progress. As we have also catalysed research in this field in related tropical systems, as per the funding programme's aims, we also have outputs that have demonstrated the key role of macrofauna (termites) in influencing the carbon cycle of tropical forests. We have also analysed how nutrients, soil microbes and soil carbon compounds influence the temperature sensitivity of soil carbon in tropical forests, suggesting that montane soils may be particularly temperature (warming) sensitive, and we have followed this up with new EU funding to link the BALI work, as per the goals of the programme with cognate activities in Latin America, in particular through a soil warming experiment in Panama. We have also published a new way to represent temperature responses that relies on the Ratkowsky equation approach, by considering minimum soil temperature as well as change with warming, avoids some of the limitations of the standard Arrhenius approach. We have also been the first to demonstrate that microbial diversity decreases with increased elevation on tropical mountains. This finding shows that microbial community responses, in terms of species diversity, follow similar patterns to those of plants and animals, a fundamental observation that has not been advanced upon since von Humboldt's first descriptions of species distribution and elevation in 1805. In the canopy our work has led to a paper demonstrating that tree death may be predictable from the reflectance signature of leaves (in Borneo). Finally this grant funding was partially related to work in Latin/Central America, and led to a soil warming experiment in tropical forest that showed a higher than expected temperature response in soil respiration and an increase in the respiration flux of approx 50% for a 4 degree C warming, higher than in other biomes.
Exploitation Route Earth system science
Conservation of biological diversity
Ecosystem science
Land use policy and environment
Education
Sectors Education,Environment

 
Description Research write up is now in full progress. However we have strongly supported the aims of the funding programme to generate research synergies in biologically linked areas. With this in mind we have outputs that map directly to this project that have demonstrated the key role of macrofauna (termites) in influencing the carbon cycle of tropical forests. We have also analysed how nutrients, soil microbes and soil carbon compounds influence the temperature sensitivity of soil carbon in tropical forests, suggesting that montane soils may be particularly temperature (warming) sensitive. We have published a new way to represent temperature responses that relies on the Ratkowsky equation approach, by considering minimum soil temperature as well as change with warming, avoids some of the limitations of the standard Arrhenius approach. We have also been the first to demonstrate that microbial diversity decreases with increased elevation on tropical mountains. This finding shows that microbial community responses, in terms of species diversity, follow similar patterns to those of plants and animals, a fundamental observation that has not been advanced upon since von Humboldt's first descriptions of species distribution and elevation in 1805. In the canopy our work has led to a paper demonstrating that tree death may be predictable from the reflectance signature of leaves (in Borneo). Finally this grant funding was partially related to work in Latin/Central America, and led to a soil warming experiment in tropical forest that showed a higher than expected temperature response in soil respiration and an increase in the respiration flux of approx 50% for a 4 degree C warming, higher than in other biomes.
First Year Of Impact 2014
Sector Education,Environment
Impact Types Cultural,Economic

 
Description Collaboration with EU project 'Amazalert' 
Organisation European Commission
Department Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)
Country European Union (EU) 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution We have endeavoured to set up close exchange with an EU project ?Amazalert?. The aim of 'Amazalert' is to understand the climate risk to Amazonian forests, mainly using existing data and by promoting Dynamic Global Vegetation Model (DGVM) development to improve ecosystem process simulation. A second main aim is to achieve policy-level feed-through of the results of this work in relation to land use, ecosystem services and climate in the Amazon. We have been able to bring our drought experiment (funded in this NERC project) to uniquely inform this modelling and policy feed-through process. Activities: several meetings through the year, and close exchange between this NERC project and the EU project, ?Amazalert?.                 Outcomes include wider (international) model take-up of our empirical results and more detailed modelling progress, including the development of a (new) trait based modelling framework and strong science-policy links in Brazil. Subsequent expected outcomes include increased publications emerging from this NERC/EU link, and direct influence on Brazilian government environmental and scientific policy (especially the agricultural and land use research department, Embrapa, who are partners in Amazalert).
Start Year 2013