Founder’s Briefs: An occasional series where Mongabay’s Rhett Ayers Butler shares analysis, perspectives, and story summaries. Forests with diverse tree species are more resilient to climate extremes and better at storing carbon, according to recent studies conducted in China and Panama. Though hardly groundbreaking, these findings reinforce an increasingly evident truth: Biodiversity in reforestation projects confers substantial environmental and economic advantages, reports Mongabay’s Sean Mowbray. Researchers, led by Florian Schnabel from the University of Freiburg in Germany, analyzed the world’s largest tree-planting experiment in China and a long-term reforestation project in Panama. Their work showed that forests planted with multiple species rather than single-species monocultures exhibit enhanced “temperature buffering” during weather extremes. In China, forests with up to 24 tree species reduced midday summer peak temperatures by as much as 4.4° Celsius (7.9° Fahrenheit) compared with monocultures, benefiting both biodiversity and forest functionality. In Panama, a parallel 16-year study found that diverse forests not only store greater quantities of carbon but also maintain higher stability through droughts and severe storms — weather events expected to intensify with climate change. Increased species diversity also correlates positively with economic outputs: Diverse forests produce more wood, which can underpin sustainable forest economies. While these conclusions may lack surprise — Karen D. Holl of the University of California, Santa Cruz, notes that the studies merely add “to the list of reasons” for diverse plantings —their importance is undeniable. They bolster the case for mixed-species reforestation initiatives, particularly relevant as large-scale planting projects are promoted…This article was originally published on Mongabay
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