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Grant support

A.E. was supported by REMEDINAL TE-CM (S2018/EMT-4338). L.C. and M.J.M. were supported through two grants from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (CGL2013-45634-P, CGL2016-75414-P). M.A.Z. was supported by grant RTI2018-096884-B-C32 (MICINN, Spain). C.A. was supported by the Victorian DELWP iFER (Integrated Forest Ecosystem Research) programme. A.H. was supported by the University of Alcala (Own Research Programme 2019 Postdoctoral Grant) and Basque Country Government funding support to FisioClimaCO2 (IT1022-16) research group. We thank the MITECO and MAPA (Spain) for granting access to the Spanish Forest Inventory Data.

Analysis of institutional authors

Calatayud, JAuthorEscudero, AAuthorCayuela, LAuthor

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September 27, 2022
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Article

Climate reverses directionality in the richness-abundance relationship across the World's main forest biomes

Publicated to:Nature Communications. 11 (1): 5635- - 2020-11-06 11(1), DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19460-y

Authors: Madrigal-Gonzalez, Jaime; Calatayud, Joaquin; Ballesteros-Canovas, Juan A; Escudero, Adrian; Cayuela, Luis; Rueda, Marta; Ruiz-Benito, Paloma; Herrero, Asier; Aponte, Cristina; Sagardia, Rodrigo; Plumptre, Andrew J; Dupire, Sylvain; Espinosa, Carlos, I; Tutubalina, Olga; Myint, Moe; Pataro, Luciano; Lopez-Saez, Jerome; Macia, Manuel J; Abegg, Meinrad; Zavala, Miguel A; Quesada-Roman, Adolfo; Vega-Araya, Mauricio; Golubeva, Elena; Timokhina, Yuliya; Stoffel, Markus

Affiliations

Estn Biol Donana CSIC, Dept Conservat Biol, Seville, Spain - Author
Inst Forestal Chile, Sucre 2397, Nunoa, Santiago De Chi, Chile - Author
KBA Secretariat KBA Partnership, Cambridge, England - Author
Lomonosov Moscow State Univ, Fac Geog, Moscow, Russia - Author
Natl Inst Res & Dev Forestry Marin Dracea, 128 Blvd Eroilor, Voluntari 077190, Ilfov, Romania - Author
Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res, WSL, Zurcherstr 111, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland - Author
Umea Univ, Dept Phys, Integrated Sci Lab, S-90187 Umea, Sweden - Author
Univ Alcala, Forest Ecol & Restorat, Dept Ciencias Vida, Ctra Madrid Barcelona,Km 33-4, Alcala De Henares 28805, Spain - Author
Univ Alcala, Inst Franklin, Calle Trinidad 1, Madrid 28801, Spain - Author
Univ Autonoma Madrid, Ctr Invest Biodiversidad & Cambio Global CIBC UAM, Calle Darwin 2, ES-28049 Madrid, Spain - Author
Univ Autonoma Madrid, Fac Ciencias, Dept Biol Bot, Calle Darwin 2, Madrid, Spain - Author
Univ Costa Rica, Fac Ciencias Sociales, Escuela Geog, Montes Oca 2060, San Jose, Costa Rica - Author
Univ Geneva, Dept Earth Sci, 13 Rue Maraichers, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland - Author
Univ Geneva, Dept F A Forel Environm & Aquat Sci, 66 Blvd Carl Vogt, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland - Author
Univ Geneva, Inst Environm Sci ISE, Climate Change Impacts & Risks Anthropocene C CIA, 66 Blvd Carl Vogt, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland - Author
Univ Grenoble Alpes, LESSEM, Inrae, F-38000 Grenoble, France - Author
Univ Melbourne, Sch Ecosyst & Forest Sci, 500 Yarra Blvd, Richmond, Vic 3121, Australia - Author
Univ Nacl Costa Rica, Inst Invest & Serv Forestales INISEFOR, Heredia 863000, Costa Rica - Author
Univ Rey Juan Carlos, Dept Biol & Geol Fis & Quim Inorgan, ESCET, C Tulipan S-N, Mostoles 28933, Spain - Author
Univ Seville, Dept Biol Vegetal & Ecol, C Prof Garcia Gonzalez S-N, E-41012 Seville, Spain - Author
Univ Tecn Particular Loja, Dept Ciencias Biol, EcoSs Lab, Loja 110107, Ecuador - Author
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Abstract

More tree species can increase the carbon storage capacity of forests (here referred to as the more species hypothesis) through increased tree productivity and tree abundance resulting from complementarity, but they can also be the consequence of increased tree abundance through increased available energy (more individuals hypothesis). To test these two contrasting hypotheses, we analyse the most plausible pathways in the richness-abundance relationship and its stability along global climatic gradients. We show that positive effect of species richness on tree abundance only prevails in eight of the twenty-three forest regions considered in this study. In the other forest regions, any benefit from having more species is just as likely (9 regions) or even less likely (6 regions) than the effects of having more individuals. We demonstrate that diversity effects prevail in the most productive environments, and abundance effects become dominant towards the most limiting conditions. These findings can contribute to refining cost-effective mitigation strategies based on fostering carbon storage through increased tree diversity. Specifically, in less productive environments, mitigation measures should promote abundance of locally adapted and stress tolerant tree species instead of increasing species richness. Correlations between tree species diversity and tree abundance are well established, but the direction of the relationship is unresolved. Here the authors use path models to estimate plausible causal pathways in the diversity-abundance relationship across 23 global forests regions, finding a lack of general support for a positive diversity-abundance relationship, which is prevalent in the most productive lands on Earth only

Keywords

AbundanceAdultArticleBiodiversityCarbonCarbon storageClassificationClimateDiversityDominanceEcosystemEnvironmental gradientForestForestsGradientsGrowth, development and agingIndividuals hypothesisMetabolismMitigationPatternsSpecies diversitySpecies richnessStrategic approachStressTreeTree productivityTrees

Quality index

Bibliometric impact. Analysis of the contribution and dissemination channel

The work has been published in the journal Nature Communications due to its progression and the good impact it has achieved in recent years, according to the agency WoS (JCR), it has become a reference in its field. In the year of publication of the work, 2020, it was in position 4/72, thus managing to position itself as a Q1 (Primer Cuartil), in the category Multidisciplinary Sciences. Notably, the journal is positioned above the 90th percentile.

From a relative perspective, and based on the normalized impact indicator calculated from the Field Citation Ratio (FCR) of the Dimensions source, it yields a value of: 5.95, which indicates that, compared to works in the same discipline and in the same year of publication, it ranks as a work cited above average. (source consulted: Dimensions Jul 2025)

Specifically, and according to different indexing agencies, this work has accumulated citations as of 2025-07-26, the following number of citations:

  • WoS: 20
  • Scopus: 23
  • Europe PMC: 5

Impact and social visibility

From the perspective of influence or social adoption, and based on metrics associated with mentions and interactions provided by agencies specializing in calculating the so-called "Alternative or Social Metrics," we can highlight as of 2025-07-26:

  • The use, from an academic perspective evidenced by the Altmetric agency indicator referring to aggregations made by the personal bibliographic manager Mendeley, gives us a total of: 83.
  • The use of this contribution in bookmarks, code forks, additions to favorite lists for recurrent reading, as well as general views, indicates that someone is using the publication as a basis for their current work. This may be a notable indicator of future more formal and academic citations. This claim is supported by the result of the "Capture" indicator, which yields a total of: 86 (PlumX).

With a more dissemination-oriented intent and targeting more general audiences, we can observe other more global scores such as:

  • The Total Score from Altmetric: 126.1.
  • The number of mentions on the social network X (formerly Twitter): 52 (Altmetric).
  • The number of mentions in news outlets: 12 (Altmetric).

It is essential to present evidence supporting full alignment with institutional principles and guidelines on Open Science and the Conservation and Dissemination of Intellectual Heritage. A clear example of this is:

  • The work has been submitted to a journal whose editorial policy allows open Open Access publication.

Leadership analysis of institutional authors

This work has been carried out with international collaboration, specifically with researchers from: Australia; Chile; Costa Rica; Ecuador; France; Oman; Russia; Sweden; Switzerland; United Kingdom.