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How Climate Shapes the Functioning of Tropical Montane Cloud Forests

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posted on 2025-08-01, 10:21 authored by CB Eller, LD Meireles, S Sitch, SSO Burgess, RS Oliveira
Purpose of Review: Tropical Montane Cloud Forest (TMCF) is a highly vulnerable ecosystem, which occurs at higher elevations in tropical mountains. Many aspects of TMCF vegetation functioning are poorly understood, making it difficult to quantify and project TMCF vulnerability to global change. We compile functional traits data to provide an overview of TMCF functional ecology. We use numerical models to understand the consequences of TMCF functional composition with respect to its responses to climate and link the traits of TMCF to its environmental conditions. Recent Findings: TMCF leaves are small and have low SLA but high Rubisco content per leaf area. This implies that TMCF maximum net leaf carbon assimilation (An) is high but often limited by low temperature and leaf wetting. Cloud immersion provides important water and potentially nutrient inputs to TMCF plants. TMCF species possess low sapwood specific conductivity, which is compensated with a lower tree height and higher sapwood to leaf area ratio. These traits associated with a more conservative stomatal regulation results in a higher hydraulic safety margin than nearby forests not affected by clouds. The architecture of TMCF trees including its proportionally thicker trunks and large root systems increases tree mechanical stability. Summary: The TMCF functional traits can be conceptually linked to its colder and cloudy environment limiting An, growth, water transport and nutrient availability. A hotter climate would drastically affect the abiotic filters shaping TMCF communities and potentially facilitate the invasion of TMCF by more productive lowland species.

Funding

11/52072-0

FAPESP

NE/R00532X/1

Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)

Newton Fund

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Rights

© Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via the DOI in this record

Journal

Current Forestry Reports

Publisher

Springer

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2020-08-18T10:29:19Z

FOA date

2021-05-10T23:00:00Z

Citation

Vol. 6, pp. 97 - 114

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