Tree species composition governs urban phenological responses to warming

被引:0
|
作者
Zhaofei Wu [1 ]
Constantin M. Zohner [2 ]
Yuyu Zhou [2 ]
Thomas W. Crowther [3 ]
Hongzhou Wang [2 ]
Yiming Wang [4 ]
Josep Peñuelas [5 ]
Yufeng Gong [6 ]
Jian Zhang [7 ]
Yibiao Zou [1 ]
Johan Van den Hoogen [8 ]
Yongshuo H. Fu [2 ]
机构
[1] Beijing Normal University,College of Water Sciences
[2] ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology),Institute of Integrative Biology
[3] The University of Hong Kong,Department of Geography and Institute for Climate and Carbon Neutrality
[4] Beijing Normal University,School of National Safety and Emergency Management
[5] USDA-ARS Hydrology and Remote Sensing Laboratory,CREAF
[6] Cerdanyola del Vallès,CSIC, Global Ecology Unit CREAF
[7] Bellaterra,CSIC
[8] Sun Yat-sen University,UAB
[9] University of Antwerp,School of Life Sciences
关键词
D O I
10.1038/s41467-025-58927-8
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Urban environments are typically warmer than surrounding rural areas, providing a unique setting for studying phenological responses to climate warming. Phenological differences between urban and rural trees are driven by local climate and species composition. Yet, the extent to which species composition influences phenological responses to urbanization remains poorly understood. To address this, we combine manipulative experiments, satellite-derived phenology data, and georeferenced tree occurrence records. Our findings show that, across Northern Hemisphere cities, differences in the temperature sensitivity of spring phenology between urban and rural areas are largely driven by urban-rural variation in species composition, surpassing the effects of preseason temperature. This pattern is particularly pronounced in Asian cities, where urban areas exhibit 0.74 ± 0.24 days/°C higher temperature sensitivity than rural areas. In-depth analyses using experiments and high-resolution satellite imagery from Beijing further demonstrate species-specific phenological responses to urbanization, with urban-dominant species exhibiting higher temperature sensitivity in urban environments compared to rural ones. These findings show that both interspecific variation in temperature sensitivity and species-specific responses to urbanization contribute to the pronounced impact of species composition on urban-rural phenological patterns. Our study underscores the importance of considering species composition when studying phenological responses to climate warming, especially in urban contexts.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Warming Responses of Leaf Morphology Are Highly Variable among Tropical Tree Species
    Manishimwe, Aloysie
    Ntirugulirwa, Bonaventure
    Zibera, Etienne
    Nyirambangutse, Brigitte
    Mujawamariya, Myriam
    Dusenge, Mirindi E.
    Bizuru, Elias
    Nsabimana, Donat
    Uddling, Johan
    Wallin, Goran
    FORESTS, 2022, 13 (02):
  • [22] Ensemble empirical mode decomposition for analyzing phenological responses to warming
    Guan, Biing T.
    AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2014, 194 : 1 - 7
  • [23] Warming experiments underpredict plant phenological responses to climate change
    E. M. Wolkovich
    B. I. Cook
    J. M. Allen
    T. M. Crimmins
    J. L. Betancourt
    S. E. Travers
    S. Pau
    J. Regetz
    T. J. Davies
    N. J. B. Kraft
    T. R. Ault
    K. Bolmgren
    S. J. Mazer
    G. J. McCabe
    B. J. McGill
    C. Parmesan
    N. Salamin
    M. D. Schwartz
    E. E. Cleland
    Nature, 2012, 485 : 494 - 497
  • [24] Warming experiments underpredict plant phenological responses to climate change
    Wolkovich, E. M.
    Cook, B. I.
    Allen, J. M.
    Crimmins, T. M.
    Betancourt, J. L.
    Travers, S. E.
    Pau, S.
    Regetz, J.
    Davies, T. J.
    Kraft, N. J. B.
    Ault, T. R.
    Bolmgren, K.
    Mazer, S. J.
    McCabe, G. J.
    McGill, B. J.
    Parmesan, C.
    Salamin, N.
    Schwartz, M. D.
    Cleland, E. E.
    NATURE, 2012, 485 (7399) : 494 - 497
  • [25] Phenological responses of prairie plants vary among species and year in a three-year experimental warming study
    Whittington, Heather R.
    Tilman, David
    Wragg, Peter D.
    Powers, Jennifer S.
    ECOSPHERE, 2015, 6 (10):
  • [26] Species-specific responses to warming alter community composition of California dragonflies
    Tituskin, J. R.
    Waddell, S. M.
    Mabry, K. E.
    INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2021, 61 : E898 - E899
  • [27] Dominant tree species of the Colorado Rockies have divergent physiological and morphological responses to warming
    Carroll, Charles J. W.
    Knapp, Alan K.
    Martin, Patrick H.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2017, 402 : 234 - 240
  • [28] The responses of dominant tree species to climate warming at the treeline on the eastern edge of the Tibetan Plateau
    Guo, Mingming
    Zhang, Yuandong
    Wang, Xiaochun
    Gu, Fengxue
    Liu, Shirong
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2018, 425 : 21 - 26
  • [29] Modeling the Land Surface Phenological Responses of Dominant Miombo Tree Species to Climate Variability in Western Tanzania
    Nkya, Siwa E.
    Shirima, Deo D.
    Masolele, Robert N.
    Hedenas, Henrik
    Temu, August B.
    REMOTE SENSING, 2024, 16 (22)
  • [30] Responses of sequential and hierarchical phenological events to warming and cooling in alpine meadows
    Xine Li
    Lili Jiang
    Fandong Meng
    Shiping Wang
    Haishan Niu
    Amy M. Iler
    Jichuan Duan
    Zhenhua Zhang
    Caiyun Luo
    Shujuan Cui
    Lirong Zhang
    Yaoming Li
    Qi Wang
    Yang Zhou
    Xiaoying Bao
    Tsechoe Dorji
    Yingnian Li
    Josep Peñuelas
    Mingyuan Du
    Xinquan Zhao
    Liang Zhao
    Guojie Wang
    Nature Communications, 7