A recent growth increase of European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) at its Mediterranean distribution limit contradicts drought stress

被引:0
作者
Willy Tegel
Andrea Seim
Dietrich Hakelberg
Stephan Hoffmann
Metodi Panev
Thorsten Westphal
Ulf Büntgen
机构
[1] University of Freiburg,Institute of Forest Sciences, IWW
[2] University of Gothenburg,Regional Climate Group, Department of Earth Sciences
[3] German Archaeological Institute,undefined
[4] DAI,undefined
[5] Swiss Federal Research Institute,undefined
[6] WSL,undefined
[7] Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research,undefined
[8] OCCR,undefined
来源
European Journal of Forest Research | 2014年 / 133卷
关键词
Albania; Balkan Peninsula; Dendroclimatology; L.; Macedonia; Tree-ring width;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Future changes in tree growth, associated with a warmer and drier climate, are predicted for many species and locations across the European Mediterranean Basin. However, quantification of the intensity and severity of related consequences for forest ecosystem functioning and productivity remains challenging. Species-specific distribution limits that are particularly sensitive to small changes in the ambient climate may provide an ideal test bed to assess the nature of past growth trends and extremes and their responsible controls. Here, we seek to understand how twentieth century climate change affected the growth of European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) nearby its south-eastern distribution limit in Albania and Macedonia on the Balkan Peninsula. We sampled 93 living trees from undisturbed mixed forest stands at ~1,450 m a.s.l. and 29 timbers from nearby historical buildings. Application of different tree-ring detrending techniques allowed robust composite chronologies with varying degrees of high- to low-frequency variability to be developed back to 1648 ad. Comparison with local meteorological station measurements and continental grid-box climate indices revealed spatiotemporal instability in growth–climate response patterns. Nevertheless, year-to-year and decadal-long fluctuations in radial beech growth were significantly (P < 0.001) negatively correlated at −0.61 with June–September temperature over the 1951–1995 period. This (inverse) relationship between increased beech growth and decreased summer temperature is somewhat indicative for the importance of plant-available soil moisture, which likely controls ring width formation near the species-specific south-eastern distribution limit. Significant positive correlations between beech growth and drought (scPDSI; r = 0.57) confirm metabolistic drought constraints. However, an unexpected late twentieth century growth increase not only contradicts the previously observed growth dependency to summer soil moisture, but also denies any putative drought-induced forest ecosystem suppression in this part of the Mediterranean Basin.
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页码:61 / 71
页数:10
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