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Details of Award

NERC Reference : NE/S011811/1

ARBOLES: A trait-based Understanding of LATAM Forest Biodiversity and Resilience

Grant Award

Principal Investigator:
Professor D Galbraith, University of Leeds, Sch of Geography
Co-Investigator:
Professor J Barlow, Lancaster University, Lancaster Environment Centre
Co-Investigator:
Professor YS Malhi, University of Oxford, Geography - SoGE
Co-Investigator:
Dr I OliverasMenor, University of Oxford, Environmental Change Institute SoGE
Co-Investigator:
Professor OL Phillips, University of Leeds, Sch of Geography
Co-Investigator:
Professor EU Gloor, University of Leeds, Sch of Geography
Co-Investigator:
Dr C Banks-Leite, Imperial College London, Life Sciences
Co-Investigator:
Professor AP Vogler, The Natural History Museum, Life Sciences
Science Area:
Terrestrial
Overall Classification:
Unknown
ENRIs:
Biodiversity
Global Change
Natural Resource Management
Science Topics:
Earth & environmental
Community Ecology
Environmental Genomics
Ecosystem Scale Processes
Remote Sensing & Earth Obs.
Abstract:
Latin American forests cover a very large latitudinal and climate gradient extending from the tropics to Southern hemisphere high latitudes. The continent therefore hosts a large variety of forest types including the Amazon - the world's largest tropical forest - as well as the diverse Atlantic forests concentrated along the coast, temperate forests in Chile and Argentina as well as the cold rainforests of Valdivia and the Nothofagus forests of Patagonia. These forests are global epicentres of biological diversity and include several tropical and extra-tropical biodiversity hotspots. For example, the Amazon rainforest is home to ~10% of terrestrial plant and animal species and store a large fraction of global organic carbon. hotspots. Some of these Latin American forests still cover a large fraction of their original (pre-colombian) extent: the Amazon still covers approximately 5 Million km2, which is 80% of its original area. However, others, such as the Atlantic forest, have nearly disappeared and are now heavily fragmented. Temperate forests have also shrunk, despite efforts to halt further reduction. However, economic development, population rises and the growth in global drivers of environmental change mean that all forests now face strong anthropogenic pressures. Locally stressors generally result from ongoing development, selective logging, the hunting of larger birds and mammals, over-exploitation of key forest resources such as valuable palm fruits, mining, and/or forest conversion for agricultural use. Global environmental drivers stem from the world's warming climate. Yet it is not clear how these local pressures and changing environmental conditions will alter the composition of Latin American forests, and whether there are thresholds between human impacts - such as the lack of dispersers in heavily fragmented forest landscapes or climate conditions exceeding limits of species tolerance - and the community level responses of forest plants. We aim to investigate this, supporting the development of strategies that can preserve the diversity of these forests and their functioning. We achieve this by investigating the relationships between diversity and functioning of these forests; exploring whether there are thresholds in functioning resulting both from pressures of forest use and changing climate; by experimentally testing responses; and by generalizing predictive capability to large scales. ARBOLES aims to achieve these goals by integrating established forest inventory approaches with cutting-edge functional trait, genomics, experimental and remote sensing approaches. Our approach involves combining forest plots with plant traits, which will enable us to characterize state and shifts over time in the face of local human disturbance and changing climate and atmospheric composition. We will focus on traits along the following axes: (i) life-history strategies measuring investment in structure (like wood density, leaf mass per area, maximum height), (ii) investment in productive organs (like leaf nutrients), (iii) investment in reproductive organs, (iv) tolerance to water stress and heat stress. The work is being conducted in collaboration with research groups in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru - and will provide a first cross-continent assessment of how humans are influencing Latin American forests.
Period of Award:
1 Feb 2019 - 31 Mar 2022
Value:
£1,107,054
Authorised funds only
NERC Reference:
NE/S011811/1
Grant Stage:
Completed
Scheme:
Directed - International
Grant Status:
Closed
Programme:
LATAM

This grant award has a total value of £1,107,054  

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FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)

DI - Other CostsException - Other CostsIndirect - Indirect CostsDA - InvestigatorsDA - Estate CostsDI - StaffDA - Other Directly AllocatedDI - T&S
£137,159£23,781£335,247£111,958£80,077£285,257£32,596£100,979

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