Litcius/Paper detail

The role of demographic compensation in stabilising marginal tree populations in North America

Xianyu Yang, Amy L. Angert, Pieter A. Zuidema, Fangliang He, Shongming Huang, Shouzhong Li, Shou‐Li Li, Nathalie Isabelle Chardon, Jian Zhang

2022Ecology Letters24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Demographic compensation-the opposing responses of vital rates along environmental gradients-potentially delays anticipated species' range contraction under climate change, but no consensus exists on its actual contribution. We calculated population growth rate (λ) and demographic compensation across the distributional ranges of 81 North American tree species and examined their responses to simulated warming and tree competition. We found that 43% of species showed stable population size at both northern and southern edges. Demographic compensation was detected in 25 species, yet 15 of them still showed a potential retraction from southern edges, indicating that compensation alone cannot maintain range stability. Simulated climatic warming caused larger decreases in λ for most species and weakened the effectiveness of demographic compensation in stabilising ranges. These findings suggest that climate stress may surpass the limited capacity of demographic compensation and pose a threat to the viability of North American tree populations.

Topics & Concepts

EcologyRange (aeronautics)Climate changePopulationPopulation sizeBiologyCompensation (psychology)Population growthCompetition (biology)GeographyDemographyPsychoanalysisMaterials sciencePsychologySociologyComposite materialSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesForest Management and Policy