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Zastosuj identyfikator do podlinkowania lub zacytowania tej pozycji: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/15982
Tytuł: Tree growth influenced by warming winter climate and summer moisture availability in northern temperate forests
Autor: Harvey, Jill E.
Smiljanić, Marko
Scharnweber, Tobias
Buras, Allan
Cedro, Anna
Cruz-García, Roberto
Drobyshev, Igor
Janecka, Karolina
Jansos, Āris
Kaczka, Ryszard
Klisz, Marcin
Läänelaid, Alar
Matisons, Roberts
Muffler, Lena
Sohar, Kristina
Spyt, Barbara
Stolz, Juliane
Van der Maaten, Ernst
Van der Maaten-Theunissen, Marieke
Vitas, Adomas
Weigel, Robert
Kreyling, Jürgen
Wilmking, Martin
Słowa kluczowe: Baltic Sea; climate change; tree growth,Europe; dendroecology, Europe; climate–growth relationships; tree-ring network; winter climate
Data wydania: 2020
Źródło: Global Change Biology, Vol. 26 (2020), s. 2505–2518
Abstrakt: The role of future forests in global biogeochemical cycles will depend on how different tree species respond to climate. Interpreting the response of forest growth to climate change requires an understanding of the temporal and spatial patterns of seasonal climatic influences on the growth of common tree species. We constructed a new network of 310 tree-ring width chronologies from three common tree species (Quercus robur, Pinus sylvestris and Fagus sylvatica) collected for different ecological, management and climate purposes in the south Baltic Sea region at the border of three bioclimatic zones (temperate continental, oceanic, southern boreal). The major climate factors (temperature, precipitation, drought) affecting tree growth at monthly and seasonal scales were identified. Our analysis documents that 20th century Scots pine and deciduous species growth is generally controlled by different climate param-eters, and that summer moisture availability is increasingly important for the growth of deciduous species examined. We report changes in the influence of winter climate variables over the last decades, where a decreasing influence of late winter tempera-ture on deciduous tree growth and an increasing influence of winter temperature on Scots pine growth was found. By comparing climate–growth responses for the 1943–1972 and 1973–2002 periods and characterizing site-level growth response stability, a descriptive application of spatial segregation nalysis distinguished sites with stable responses to dominant climate parameters (northeast of the study region), and sites that collectively showed unstable responses to winter climate (southeast of the study region). The findings presented here highlight the temporally unstable and nonuniform responses of tree growth to climate variability, and that there are geo-graphical coherent regions where these changes are similar. Considering continued climate change in the future, our results provide important regional perspectives on recent broad-scale climate–growth relationships for trees across the temperate to boreal forest transition around the south Baltic Sea.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/15982
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14966
ISSN: 1365-2486
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