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Multi-model comparison on the effects of climate change on tree species in the eastern U.S.: results from an enhanced niche model and process-based ecosystem and landscape models
Authors:Louis R Iverson  III" target="_blank">Frank R ThompsonIII  Stephen Matthews  Matthew Peters  Anantha Prasad  William D Dijak  Jacob Fraser  Wen J Wang  Brice Hanberry  Hong He  Maria Janowiak  Patricia Butler  Leslie Brandt  Christopher Swanston
Institution:1.USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station,Delaware,USA;2.USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station,Columbia,USA;3.Ohio State University and USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station,Columbus,USA;4.School of Natural Resources,University of Missouri,Columbia,USA;5.USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station,Houghton,USA;6.School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science,Michigan Technical University,Houghton,USA;7.USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station,St. Paul,USA
Abstract:

Context

Species distribution models (SDM) establish statistical relationships between the current distribution of species and key attributes whereas process-based models simulate ecosystem and tree species dynamics based on representations of physical and biological processes. TreeAtlas, which uses DISTRIB SDM, and Linkages and LANDIS PRO, process-based ecosystem and landscape models, respectively, were used concurrently on four regional climate change assessments in the eastern Unites States.

Objectives

We compared predictions for 30 species from TreeAtlas, Linkages, and LANDIS PRO, using two climate change scenarios on four regions, to derive a more robust assessment of species change in response to climate change.

Methods

We calculated the ratio of future importance or biomass to current for each species, then compared agreement among models by species, region, and climate scenario using change classes, an ordinal agreement score, spearman rank correlations, and model averaged change ratios.

Results

Comparisons indicated high agreement for many species, especially northern species modeled to lose habitat. TreeAtlas and Linkages agreed the most but each also agreed with many species outputs from LANDIS PRO, particularly when succession within LANDIS PRO was simulated to 2300. A geographic analysis showed that a simple difference (in latitude degrees) of the weighted mean center of a species distribution versus the geographic center of the region of interest provides an initial estimate for the species’ potential to gain, lose, or remain stable under climate change.

Conclusions

This analysis of multiple models provides a useful approach to compare among disparate models and a more consistent interpretation of the future for use in vulnerability assessments and adaptation planning.
Keywords:
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