Project ongoing since 2025

DIV4DROUGHT

Tree diversity effects on forest drought resilience: a mechanistic approach to reconcile divergent observations

Widespread drought-induced tree mortality threaten forests and ecosystem services, highlighting the need for strategies to enhance forest resilience. Increasing tree species diversity is a promising approach, yet its effects on drought resilience remain unclear.

 

The DIV4DROUGHT project will allow the innovative exploration of this long-standing blind spot of tree diversity effects on forests by: 1) conducting a meta-analysis of existing evidence for tree diversity effects on forest drought resilience and its components, resistance and recovery; 2) creating a global open-source database of tree hydraulic traits (linked to water transport and use) as predictors; and 3) using process-based forest dynamics models to evaluate underlying mechanisms.

 

The explored mechanisms will include complementarity effects on water use in space and time, micro-climate buffering (facilitation effect) or improved water status of tolerant species resulting from the higher mortality of drought-sensitive species during extreme drought (“fuse effect”). This interdisciplinary effort will have important implications for forest management and conservation under climate change.

Researchers

Principal Investigators:

 

GUILLEMOT Joannès – CIRAD (France) ;

GROSSIORD Charlotte – École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland)

ouvrir/fermer Participants :

BLONDEEL Haben – Ghent University (Belgium) ; DE CACERES Miquel – CREAF (Spain) ; DEL RIO Miren – CSIC (Spain) ; ESQUIVEL-MUELBERT Adriane – University of Birmingham (England) ; JACTEL Hervé – INRAE (France) ; LE MAIRE Guerric – CIRAD (France) ; MARECHAUX Isabelle – INRAE (France) ; MARTIN-STPAUL Nicolas – INRAE (France) ; MORIN Xavier – CNRS (France) ; OGÉE Jérôme – INRAE (France) ; ROWLAND Lucy – University of Exeter (England) ; SABOT Manon – Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry (Germany) ; SCHERER-LORENZEN Michael – University of Freiburg (Germany) ; SCHNABEL Florian – University of Freiburg (Germany)

The DIV4DROUGHT project brings together specialists in tree ecophysiology, community ecology, and climate-biosphere interactions.

Project

DIV4DROUGHT was selected from the 2024 FRB-CESAB call for proposals. The project selection process was carried out by a committee of independant experts.

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