2024 : 5 : 20
Ahmad Valipour

Ahmad Valipour

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 56193796200
Faculty: Faculty of Natural Resources
Address: University of Kurdistan, Sanandaj, Iran
Phone: +98 87 33620551-3212

Research

Title
Environmental filtering, predominance of strong competitor trees and exclusion of moderate-weak competitor trees shape species richness and biomass
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Climatic factorsSemi-humid and semi-arid forestsSite-level variationStand structureTemperate forestsTree sizes
Year
2020
Journal SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
DOI
Researchers Arshad Ali ، Anvar Sanaei ، Omid Asadi Nalivan ، Khaled Ahmad auli ، Mohsen Jvanmiri pour ، Ahmad Valipour ، Jalil Karami ، Mohammad Aminpour ، Hasan Kaboli ، Yousef Askari

Abstract

Strong competitor (i.e. big-sized) trees are globally crucial for promoting aboveground biomass. Still, we do not fully understand the simultaneous influences of different levels of competitor (i.e. strong, moderate, medium and weak) trees at stand level in shaping forest diversity and biomass along a climatic gradient. We hypothesized that few strong competitor trees shape the positive relationship between tree species richness and aboveground biomass better than moderate, medium and weak competitor trees along a climatic gradient. Using the forest inventory data (i.e. tree diameter, height and crown diameter), we quantified strong (i.e. 99th percentile; top 1%), moderate (i.e. 75th percentile; top 25%), medium (i.e. 50th percentile) and weak (i.e. 25th percentile) competitor trees as well as species richness and aboveground biomass of 248 plots (moist temperate, semi-humid, and semi-arid forests) across 12 sites in Iran. The main results from three piecewise structural equation models (i.e. tree diameter, height and crown based models) showed that, after considering the simultaneous fixed effects of climate and random effects of sites or forest types variation, strong competitor trees possessed strong positive effects on tree species richness and biomass whereas moderate, medium and weak competitor trees possessed negligible positive to negative effects. Also, different levels of competitor trees promoted each other in a top-down way but the effects of strong competitor trees on moderate, medium and weak competitor trees were relatively weak. This study suggests that the simultaneous interactions of different tree sizes at stand level across forest sites should be included in the integrative ecological modeling for better understanding the role of different levels of competitor trees in shaping positive forest diversity – functioning relationship in a changing environment. \