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Trees and deforestation

Human fingerprint on forest disturbance patterns as viewed from space

Forests play a critical role in maintaining biodiversity, regulating the climate, and supporting ecosystems. However, disturbances such as storms, fires, insect outbreaks, and human activities like shifting agriculture and selective logging create significant impacts on forest structures. These events leave behind ‘disturbance patches’, areas where tree cover is lost, which vary in size, shape, and complexity. Understanding these patterns is key to managing forests sustainably and protecting their ecological functions.

The landscape structure of stand-replacing disturbances has strong implications for forest recovery. It can influence the composition of the vegetation communities that will regrow which can alter succession trajectory and therefore forest regeneration.”

For example, smaller, irregular patches recover more quickly because they are closer to seed sources and less affected by altered microclimates. Larger or more uniform patches, however, may disrupt habitat connectivity, reduce biodiversity, and slow regrowth.

Distribution-of-disturbance-patterns-based-on-total-areas-covered.

Disturbance patterns vary naturally across regions depending on environmental specificities and the agents of disturbances. A key insight reported by the research team is that human activities tend to leave similar patterns throughout the world independently of the biome. This has led to novel disturbance structures in the tropics, that contrast with the patterns naturally occurring there and to which the forests are adapted. This implies that a fundamental change is underway in these forests, with potential implications for their resilience.

Dr Thomas Pugh, co-author and PhD supervisor from the University of Birmingham, based at Lund University, commented:

The ongoing way in which people are altering the world’s forests really shines through in these results – different disturbance forms can in many cases be expected to lead to quite different forest structures in the future.”

The study warns that continued anthropogenic ‘homogenization’ of disturbance structures worldwide poses risks to forests’ natural diversity and complexity, which could have far-reaching consequences for carbon storage, biodiversity maintenance and ecological resilience.

By shedding light on the patterns of forest disturbances, the research provides a foundation for developing better nature-based forest management and conservation strategies. These insights are essential for mitigating climate change impacts and ensuring the sustainability of global forest ecosystems.

The research was part of the TreeMort project, funded by a European Research Council EU grant, and involved researchers from the University of Leicester, University of Birmingham, Technical University of Munich, Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke) and Lund University.

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Published by Tara Thompson
Communications and Engagement Manager
University of Leicester

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