Tropical forests aren’t keeping pace with climate change

Publicly released:
Australia; International; SA
Canopy view of a tropical rainforest from a canopy access crane located in San Lorenzo, Panamá, operated by the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Credit: Sami Rifai.
Canopy view of a tropical rainforest from a canopy access crane located in San Lorenzo, Panamá, operated by the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Credit: Sami Rifai.

A major new study has revealed that tropical forests across the Americas are not adapting quickly enough to climate change, raising concerns about their long-term resilience. By examining the traits of more than 250,000 trees, the team of international and Australian researchers assessed how different species are responding to shifting temperatures and rainfall patterns.

Media release

From: The University of Adelaide

A major new study has revealed that tropical forests across the Americas are not adapting quickly enough to climate change, raising concerns about their long-term resilience.

Led by Dr Jesús Aguirre-Gutiérrez, from the University of Oxford’s Environmental Change Institute (ECI), and involving researchers from the University of Adelaide, the study saw more than 100 scientists and local partners analyse data from 415 permanent forest plots, spanning Mexico to southern Brazil.

By examining the traits of more than 250,000 trees, the team assessed how different species are responding to shifting temperatures and rainfall patterns.

“Due to how rapidly climate change is altering temperature and precipitation patterns, tree communities are responding too slowly to remain in equilibrium with their environment,” says Dr Sami Rifai, a lecturer from the University of Adelaide’s School of Biological Sciences.

“By 2100, temperatures in the region could rise by up to 4°C, with rainfall decreasing by as much as 20 per cent. This could push tropical forests further out of balance, making them more vulnerable to extreme climate events.”

The study, published in Science, was completed using field data taken from the forest plots.

“This study pulled together data covering a dozen different functional traits – such as leaf size, wood density and maximum height – from over a thousand tree species,” says Dr Rifai.

“These plant functional trait measurements were then paired with tree species composition data collected from 415 forest plots where growth, mortality, and recruitment were tracked for more than a quarter million trees to characterise how these forests have changed over the past 40 years.

“Next, this 40-year change in the plant functional traits of the forest plots was compared to how it might be expected to change if these forests’ functional traits were changing proportionately to the last 40 years of climate change.

“Rather than keeping pace with a changing climate, it was found that the functional traits from these hundreds of forest plots had shifted by less than 8 per cent of what would be required to track changes in climate.

“This is a worrying finding given the importance of tropical rainforests for sustaining species diversity and the functioning of the terrestrial biosphere.”

Tropical rainforests play a vital role in global climate regulation and biodiversity conservation, but their ability to adapt to climate change is limited. This study shows a way forward for conservationists looking to preserve this vital function.

“By looking at individual trees from different communities, we found some have suffered due to climate shifts, while others have thrived,” says Dr Aguirre-Gutiérrez.

“If we know what species of trees are doing better or worse, and what set of traits they have, then we know what they can withstand. It will help inform what conservation actions should be encouraged and where funding should be allocated.”

The University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia are joining forces to become Australia’s new major university – Adelaide University. Building on the strengths, legacies and resources of two leading universities, Adelaide University will deliver globally relevant research at scale, innovative, industry-informed teaching and an outstanding student experience. Adelaide University will open its doors in January 2026. Find out more on the Adelaide University website.

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Funder: J.A.-G. was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council under an independent research fellowship (NERC grant NE/T011084/1), NERC Pushing the Frontiers (NE/Z504191/1), and the Oxford University John Fell Fund (grant 10667). Global traits collection and traits analyses under GEM were funded by an ERC Advanced Investigator Award (GEM-TRAIT grant 321131) to Y.M. under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (grant FP7/2007–2013) with additional support from NERC grant NE/D014174/1 and NE/J022616/1 for traits work in Peru and NERC grant ECOFOR (NE/K016385/1) for traits work in Santarem. Plot inventories in Peru were supported by funding from the US National Science Foundation Long-Term Research in Environmental Biology program (LTREB grant DEB 1754647) and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Andes–Amazon Program. Plot inventories in Nova Xavantina (Brazil) were supported by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) PQ1 grants 311027/2019-9 and 303492/2022-8 to B.H.M. and B.S.M., the Long-Term Ecological Research Program (PELD), processes 441244/2016–5 and 441572/2020-0, and the Foundation of Research Support of Mato Grosso (FAPEMAT), Project ReFlor, processes 589267/2016 and PELD/FAPEMAT 0346321/2021. S.D. acknowledges support from CONICET, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba and Red Federal de Alto Impacto CONATURAR (grant 2023-102072649-APN-MCT) Argentina and the Oxford Martin School. C.A.J. acknowledges support from the Brazilian National Research Council/CNPq (PELD process 403710/2012–0), NERC, and the State of São Paulo Research Foundation/FAPESP as part of the projects Functional Gradient, PELD/BIOTA and ECOFOR (processes 2003/12595-7, 2012/51509-8 and 2012/51872-5, within the BIOTA/FAPESP Program—The Biodiversity Virtual Institute; COTEC/IF 002.766/2013 and 010.631/2013 permits. B.S.M. was supported by the CNPq/PELD projects 441244/2016-5 and 441572/2020-0 and CAPES project 136277/2017-0. M.S. acknowledges funding for Andes Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research Group (ABERG) plot network from the US National Science Foundation (NSF) Long-Term Research in Environmental Biology (LTREB grant 1754647), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s Andes to Amazon Initiative, and RAINFOR. E.B, J.B., and Y.M. acknowledge support from NERC under projects NE/K016431/1 and NE/S01084X/1. Y.M. is supported by the Frank Jackson Foundation and the Leverhulme Trust. The MONAFOR network in Mexico has been funded by several projects highlighting those by the National Forestry Commission (CONAFOR) and the Council of Science and Technology of the State of Durango (COCYTED); F.C.S. acknowledges the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel – Brazil (CAPES) (Finance Code 001), and the Brazilian National Research Council/CNPq (PDJ Process No. 152806/2024-5). B.J.E. was supported by NSF awards (grant nos 2225078 and 2225076).
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