Journal ArticleOpen Access
Human activities and species biological traits drive the long-term persistence of old trees in human-dominated landscapes
Authors
Li Huang, Cheng Jin, Ying Pan, Lihua Zhou, …
Author Affiliations
Chongqing University, Peking University, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Northeast Institute of Geography and Agroecology, ...
Published InNature Plants
Year2023
Citations44
Abstract
Old trees have many ecological and socio-cultural values. However, knowledge of the factors influencing their long-term persistence in human-dominated landscapes is limited. Here, using an extensive database (nearly 1.8 million individual old trees belonging to 1,580 species) from China, we identified which species were most likely to persist as old trees in human-dominated landscapes and where they were most likely to occur. We found that species with greater potential height, smaller leaf size and diverse human utilization attributes had the highest probability of long-term persistence. The persistence probabilities of human-associated species (taxa with diverse human utilization attributes) were relatively high in intensively cultivated areas. Conversely, the persistence probabilities of spontaneous species (taxa with no human utilization attributes and which are…
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