Climate-Induced Forest Mortality in the Tropical Pacific Islands: What Do We Really Know?

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • University of the South Pacific
View graph of relations

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)139-161
Number of pages23
JournalPacific science
Volume77
Issue number2-3
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2024

Abstract

Between 1954 and the mid-1980s, about 50,000 ha of native montane rainforest on the island of Hawai'i experienced a decline in canopy trees ("'ohi'a dieback"), leading to great concern about the future of Hawai'i's rainforests. Dieback symptoms particularly affected the dominant tree species, the endemic Metrosideros polymorpha. Early hypotheses postulated that the forest decline was caused by a virulent pathogen or a combination of biotic disease and pest agents. This was ruled out after a decade of intensive disease research in the 1970s. Instead, it turned out that dieback patterns were significantly related to the physical environment, particularly the slope, topography, relative position on the hill slope, annual rainfall, and the type of substrate. Thus, an alternative hypothesis proposed that dieback is initiated by climate anomalies that manifest through soil moisture regimes under certain conditions of forest stand demography. Ironically, scientific perception of this interdisciplinary groundbreaking research that stimulated a global perspective on forest decline vanished while the awareness of climate change and its potential impact on the world's forests started to grow, rapidly becoming a major focus of research in recent years. In this paper, we reinforce memory of the world's first complex discussion on the natural causes of forest dieback as a showcase for the complexity of modern forest mortality research. This case demonstrates the need to rigorously identify, quantify, and fully understand all drivers of tree mortality to realistically project future climate-driven and other risks to forest ecosystem functions and services. Moreover, we summarize recent findings on forest mortality and climate change in the Pacific islands and beyond.

Keywords

    cavitation, climate change, dieback, Metrosideros polymorpha, montane rainforest, novel ecosystem, tree mortality, vulnerability

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Sustainable Development Goals

Cite this

Climate-Induced Forest Mortality in the Tropical Pacific Islands: What Do We Really Know? / Boehmer, Hans Juergen; Galvin, Stephen.
In: Pacific science, Vol. 77, No. 2-3, 01.02.2024, p. 139-161.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Download
@article{97bfe50513044f4ab4f991461eb30ef1,
title = "Climate-Induced Forest Mortality in the Tropical Pacific Islands: What Do We Really Know?",
abstract = "Between 1954 and the mid-1980s, about 50,000 ha of native montane rainforest on the island of Hawai'i experienced a decline in canopy trees ({"}'ohi'a dieback{"}), leading to great concern about the future of Hawai'i's rainforests. Dieback symptoms particularly affected the dominant tree species, the endemic Metrosideros polymorpha. Early hypotheses postulated that the forest decline was caused by a virulent pathogen or a combination of biotic disease and pest agents. This was ruled out after a decade of intensive disease research in the 1970s. Instead, it turned out that dieback patterns were significantly related to the physical environment, particularly the slope, topography, relative position on the hill slope, annual rainfall, and the type of substrate. Thus, an alternative hypothesis proposed that dieback is initiated by climate anomalies that manifest through soil moisture regimes under certain conditions of forest stand demography. Ironically, scientific perception of this interdisciplinary groundbreaking research that stimulated a global perspective on forest decline vanished while the awareness of climate change and its potential impact on the world's forests started to grow, rapidly becoming a major focus of research in recent years. In this paper, we reinforce memory of the world's first complex discussion on the natural causes of forest dieback as a showcase for the complexity of modern forest mortality research. This case demonstrates the need to rigorously identify, quantify, and fully understand all drivers of tree mortality to realistically project future climate-driven and other risks to forest ecosystem functions and services. Moreover, we summarize recent findings on forest mortality and climate change in the Pacific islands and beyond.",
keywords = "cavitation, climate change, dieback, Metrosideros polymorpha, montane rainforest, novel ecosystem, tree mortality, vulnerability",
author = "Boehmer, {Hans Juergen} and Stephen Galvin",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.2984/77.2.2",
language = "English",
volume = "77",
pages = "139--161",
journal = "Pacific science",
issn = "0030-8870",
publisher = "University of Hawaii Press",
number = "2-3",

}

Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate-Induced Forest Mortality in the Tropical Pacific Islands

T2 - What Do We Really Know?

AU - Boehmer, Hans Juergen

AU - Galvin, Stephen

PY - 2024/2/1

Y1 - 2024/2/1

N2 - Between 1954 and the mid-1980s, about 50,000 ha of native montane rainforest on the island of Hawai'i experienced a decline in canopy trees ("'ohi'a dieback"), leading to great concern about the future of Hawai'i's rainforests. Dieback symptoms particularly affected the dominant tree species, the endemic Metrosideros polymorpha. Early hypotheses postulated that the forest decline was caused by a virulent pathogen or a combination of biotic disease and pest agents. This was ruled out after a decade of intensive disease research in the 1970s. Instead, it turned out that dieback patterns were significantly related to the physical environment, particularly the slope, topography, relative position on the hill slope, annual rainfall, and the type of substrate. Thus, an alternative hypothesis proposed that dieback is initiated by climate anomalies that manifest through soil moisture regimes under certain conditions of forest stand demography. Ironically, scientific perception of this interdisciplinary groundbreaking research that stimulated a global perspective on forest decline vanished while the awareness of climate change and its potential impact on the world's forests started to grow, rapidly becoming a major focus of research in recent years. In this paper, we reinforce memory of the world's first complex discussion on the natural causes of forest dieback as a showcase for the complexity of modern forest mortality research. This case demonstrates the need to rigorously identify, quantify, and fully understand all drivers of tree mortality to realistically project future climate-driven and other risks to forest ecosystem functions and services. Moreover, we summarize recent findings on forest mortality and climate change in the Pacific islands and beyond.

AB - Between 1954 and the mid-1980s, about 50,000 ha of native montane rainforest on the island of Hawai'i experienced a decline in canopy trees ("'ohi'a dieback"), leading to great concern about the future of Hawai'i's rainforests. Dieback symptoms particularly affected the dominant tree species, the endemic Metrosideros polymorpha. Early hypotheses postulated that the forest decline was caused by a virulent pathogen or a combination of biotic disease and pest agents. This was ruled out after a decade of intensive disease research in the 1970s. Instead, it turned out that dieback patterns were significantly related to the physical environment, particularly the slope, topography, relative position on the hill slope, annual rainfall, and the type of substrate. Thus, an alternative hypothesis proposed that dieback is initiated by climate anomalies that manifest through soil moisture regimes under certain conditions of forest stand demography. Ironically, scientific perception of this interdisciplinary groundbreaking research that stimulated a global perspective on forest decline vanished while the awareness of climate change and its potential impact on the world's forests started to grow, rapidly becoming a major focus of research in recent years. In this paper, we reinforce memory of the world's first complex discussion on the natural causes of forest dieback as a showcase for the complexity of modern forest mortality research. This case demonstrates the need to rigorously identify, quantify, and fully understand all drivers of tree mortality to realistically project future climate-driven and other risks to forest ecosystem functions and services. Moreover, we summarize recent findings on forest mortality and climate change in the Pacific islands and beyond.

KW - cavitation

KW - climate change

KW - dieback

KW - Metrosideros polymorpha

KW - montane rainforest

KW - novel ecosystem

KW - tree mortality

KW - vulnerability

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85184066337&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.2984/77.2.2

DO - 10.2984/77.2.2

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85184066337

VL - 77

SP - 139

EP - 161

JO - Pacific science

JF - Pacific science

SN - 0030-8870

IS - 2-3

ER -