Article
Details
Citation
Abernethy K & Jeffery K (2025) Canopy functional trait variation across Earth’s tropical forests. Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08663-2
Abstract
Tropical forest canopies are the biosphere’s most concentrated atmospheric interface for carbon, water and energy1,2. However, in most Earth System Models, the diverse and heterogeneous tropical forest biome is represented as a largely uniform ecosystem with
either a singular or a small number of fixed canopy ecophysiological properties 3. This situation arises, in part, from a lack of understanding about how and why the functional properties of tropical forest canopies vary geographically 4. Here, by combining
feld-collected data from more than 1,800 vegetation plots and tree traits with satellite remote-sensing, terrain, climate and soil data, we predict variation across 13 morphological, structural and chemical functional traits of trees, and use this to compute and map the functional diversity of tropical forests. Our findings reveal that the
tropical Americas, Africa and Asia tend to occupy different portions of the total functional trait space available across tropical forests. Tropical American forests are predicted to have 40% greater functional richness than tropical African and Asian forests.
Meanwhile, African forests have the highest functional divergence—32% and 7% higher than that of tropical American and Asian forests, respectively. An uncertainty analysis highlights priority regions for further data collection, which would refine and improve
these maps. Our predictions represent a ground-based and remotely enabled global analysis of how and why the functional traits of tropical forest canopies vary across space.
Journal
Nature
Status | Accepted |
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Funders | ANPN Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux and ANPN Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux |
Date accepted by journal | 20/01/2025 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/36886 |
ISSN | 0028-0836 |
eISSN | 1476-4687 |
People (2)
Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences
Associate Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences