A major international
collaboration of 356 scientists led by UCL researchers has found almost
identical patterns of tree diversity across the world's tropical forests.
The study of over one
million trees across 1,568 locations, published in Nature, found
that just 2.2% of tree species make up 50% of the total number of trees in
tropical forests across Africa, the Amazon, and Southeast Asia. Each continent
consists of the same proportion of a few common species and many rare species.
While tropical forests
are famous for their diversity, this is the first time that scientists have
studied the commonest trees in the world's tropical forests.
The scientists estimate
that just 1,053 species account for half of the planet's 800 billion tropical
forest trees. The other half are comprised of 46,000 tree species. The number
of rare species is extreme, with the rarest 39,500 species accounting for just
10% of trees.
Lead author Dr Declan
Cooper (UCL Geography and UCL Centre for Biodiversity and Environment Research)
said: "Our findings have profound implications for understanding tropical
forests. If we focus on understanding the commonest tree species, we can
probably predict how the whole forest will respond to today's rapid
environmental changes. This is especially important because tropical forests
contain a tremendous amount of stored carbon, and are a globally important
carbon sink."
He continued:
"Identifying the prevalence of the most common species gives scientists a
new way of looking at tropical forests. Tracking these common species may
provide a new way to characterize these forests and in the future possibly
gauge a forest's health more easily."
The researchers found
strikingly similar patterns in the proportion of tree species that are common,
at close to 2.2%, despite the tropical forests of the Amazon, Africa and
Southeast Asia each having a unique history and differing contemporary environments.
The Amazon consists of a
large region of connected forest, while Southeast Asia is a region of mostly
disconnected islands. People only arrived in the Amazon around 20,000 years
ago, but people have been living in African and Southeast Asian forests for
more than twice that length of time. In terms of the contemporary environment,
African forests experience a drier and cooler climate than the other two
tropical forest regions.
Given these striking
differences, the near-identical patterns of tree diversity suggests that a
fundamental mechanism may govern the assembly of tree communities across all
the world's tropical forests. The researchers are not yet able to say what that
mechanism might be and it will focus future work on identifying it.
The estimates of common
species derive from statistical analyses, which does not provide the names of
the common trees. To overcome this, the scientists used a technique known as
resampling to estimate which are the most likely names of the common species.
Their list of 1,119 tree species names, the first list of common species of the
world's tropical forests, will allow researchers to focus their efforts on
understanding the ecology of these species, which in turn can give scientists a
short-cut to understand the whole forest.
See table below for a
list of the most common tropical tree species.
Senior author, Professor
Simon Lewis (UCL Geography and University of Leeds) said: "We wanted to
look at tropical forests in a new way. Focusing on a few hundred common tree
species on each continent, rather than the many thousands of species that we
know almost nothing about, can open new ways to understand these precious
forests. This focus on the commonest species should not take away from the
importance of rare species. Rare species need special attention to protect
them, but quick and important gains in knowledge will come from a scientific
focus on the commonest tree species."
The researchers assembled
forest inventory data from intact tropical forests that hadn't been affected by
logging or fire. In each of 1,568 locations, teams identified and recorded
every tree with a trunk greater than 10 centimeters in diameter, in a patch of
forest, usually one hectare, which is a square of forest measuring 100 meters
on each side.
Professor Lewis has been
collecting and collating this data for 20 years. The effort is a collaboration
of the largest plot networks across the Amazon (Amazon Tree Diversity Network;
RAINFOR), Africa (African Tropical Rainforest Observatory Network, AfriTRON;
Central African Plot Network), and Southeast Asia (Silk Diversity Network;
T-FORCES), brought together for the first time for the published analysis.
This collaboration across
hundreds of researchers, field assistants, and local communities resulted in a
total of 1,003,805 trees sampled, which included 8,493 tree species, across
2,048 hectares, equivalent to almost eight square miles of forest. The teams
inventoried 1,097 plots in the Amazon totaling 1,434 hectares, 368 plots in
Africa totaling 450 hectares, and 103 plots in Southeast Asia totaling 164
hectares.
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