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Dryad

Low-severity winds reduce tropical forest structural complexity regardless of climate, topography or forest age

Abstract

Forests are often exposed to regular, non-severe winds (chronic wind exposure), yet the effect of such winds on canopy structure in tropical forests remains understudied. The height and structural complexity of a forest canopy are strongly and positively correlated with biodiversity and carbon accumulation. Understanding the drivers of canopy structural complexity across broad environmental gradients can therefore improve the mapping and modeling of diversity and carbon dynamics. Here we predict the height and structural complexity of forests in the heterogeneous island of Puerto Rico, with a particular focus on the impacts of chronic wind exposure. To do so, we used remote sensing to randomly sample ~20,000, 0.28 ha forested sites stratified by forest age, and used airborne LiDAR data from 2016 to quantify canopy height and a key metric of structural complexity, rugosity – the standard deviation in canopy height. We then ran random forest models to predict canopy height and rugosity based on chronic wind exposure, forest age, mean annual precipitation, elevation, slope, soil type, soil available water storage, and exposure to two previous hurricanes (in 1989 and 1998). Canopy height was 4 m taller on average (41%) between forests aged 17-25 years and old-growth forests and by 4 m on average (41%) between 1,000 and 2,000 mm-yr precipitation, leveling off at 2,000 mm-yr. Height was 2.12 m (16%) shorter on average between sites exposed to chronic winds and protected sites after accounting for all other factors. Rugosity was 1 m (32%) greater between the tallest and shortest forests, by 0.5 m (15%) between 1,000 and 2,000 mm-yr precipitation, and smaller by 0.5 m (15%) between forests above and below 1,000 m elevation. Rugosity was highest in forests of intermediate age (25-40 years), and lowest in old-growth forests, possibly because of higher elevation and chronic wind exposure in old-growth forests. We found no effect of slope, soil characteristics or previous hurricane exposure on either height or rugosity. Our results suggest that alongside forest age and climate context, chronic wind exposure plays an integral role in shaping the structure and carbon cycle of tropical forests.