Historical tree phenology data reveal the seasonal rhythms of the Congo Basin rainforest.

Elizabeth Kearsley, Hans Verbeeck, Piet Stoffelen,Steven B Janssens, Emmanuel Kasongo Yakusu,Margaret Kosmala, Tom De Mil, Marijn Bauters, Elasi Ramanzani Kitima, José Mbifo Ndiapo, Adelard Lonema Chuda,Andrew D Richardson, Lisa Wingate,Bhély Angoboy Ilondea, Hans Beeckman,Jan van den Bulcke, Pascal Boeckx,Koen Hufkens

Plant-environment interactions (Hoboken, N.J.)(2024)

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摘要
Tropical forest phenology directly affects regional carbon cycles, but the relation between species-specific and whole-canopy phenology remains largely uncharacterized. We present a unique analysis of historical tropical tree phenology collected in the central Congo Basin, before large-scale impacts of human-induced climate change. Ground-based long-term (1937-1956) phenological observations of 140 tropical tree species are recovered, species-specific phenological patterns analyzed and related to historical meteorological records, and scaled to characterize stand-level canopy dynamics. High phenological variability within and across species and in climate-phenology relationships is observed. The onset of leaf phenophases in deciduous species was triggered by drought and light availability for a subset of species and showed a species-specific decoupling in time along a bi-modal seasonality. The majority of the species remain evergreen, although central African forests experience relatively low rainfall. Annually a maximum of 1.5% of the canopy is in leaf senescence or leaf turnover, with overall phenological variability dominated by a few deciduous species, while substantial variability is attributed to asynchronous events of large and/or abundant trees. Our results underscore the importance of accounting for constituent signals in canopy-wide scaling and the interpretation of remotely sensed phenology signals.
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leaf senescence,leaf turnover,phenology,scaling,tropical forest
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