Different tree-ring responses of Norway spruce to air temperature across an altitudinal gradient in the Eastern Carpathians (Romania)

被引:105
|
作者
Sidor, Cristian Gheorghe [1 ]
Popa, Ionel [1 ]
Vlad, Radu [1 ]
Cherubini, Paolo [2 ]
机构
[1] Forest Res & Management Inst, Res Stn Norway Spruce Silviculture, Campulung Moldovenesc, Romania
[2] WSL Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland
来源
TREES-STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION | 2015年 / 29卷 / 04期
关键词
Climate-growth relationships; Dendrochronology; Tree-ring chronology network; Spatial patterns; ABIES L. KARST; RADIAL GROWTH; WHITE SPRUCE; CLIMATE; VARIABILITY; FORESTS; DENDROCLIMATOLOGY; INCREMENT; WEATHER; SITE;
D O I
10.1007/s00468-015-1178-3
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
A global increase in temperature could potentially increase the trees' growth at high altitude and decrease at low altitude. Another immediate consequence would be an increase of the altitude threshold where the inversion of tree growth response to temperature occurs. The first network of 18 tree-ring chronologies of Norway spruce (Picea abies) from the Eastern Carpathians (Romania) was studied in relation to the climatic factors and regional patterns in tree growth responses to climate. The sites are distributed along a latitudinal and altitudinal transect. The tree growth reaction to climate variability was analyzed by means of response functions. We used redundancy analysis (RDA) to identify regional patterns in the climatic response. The Norway spruce diameter growth patterns in Eastern Carpathians from Romania correspond to different climatic responses according to three elevation levels: low (a parts per thousand currency sign1000 m a.s.l.); intermediate (1000-1300 m a.s.l.); high (a parts per thousand yen1300 m a.s.l.). At high altitudinal level tree growth is strongly limited by summer temperatures. This climatic signal progressively decreases with decreasing altitude and increasing mean temperature. Tree growth at low elevation sites is controlled mainly by summer precipitations and in the intermediate elevation sites there is not any statistically significant correlation with climatic variables. At elevations of 1000-1100 m a.s.l., at a mean temperature of 13-13.5 A degrees C in June and 15.5-16 A degrees C in July, further increases in mean temperature result in an inversion of the relationship between tree-ring growth and temperature (i.e., the response becomes negative). A global increase in temperature could potentially increase the trees' growth at high altitude and decrease at low altitude. Another immediate consequence would be an increase of the altitude threshold where the inversion of tree growth response to temperature occurs.
引用
收藏
页码:985 / 997
页数:13
相关论文
共 15 条
  • [1] Different tree-ring responses of Norway spruce to air temperature across an altitudinal gradient in the Eastern Carpathians (Romania)
    Cristian Gheorghe Sidor
    Ionel Popa
    Radu Vlad
    Paolo Cherubini
    [J]. Trees, 2015, 29 : 985 - 997
  • [2] Do Different Tree-Ring Proxies Contain Different Temperature Signals? A Case Study of Norway Spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst) in the Eastern Carpathians
    Popa, Andrei
    Popa, Ionel
    Roibu, Catalin-Constantin
    Badea, Ovidiu Nicolae
    [J]. PLANTS-BASEL, 2022, 11 (18):
  • [3] Tree-ring records of snow-avalanche activity in the Rodna Mountains (Eastern Carpathians, Romania)
    Ionela Georgiana Gavrilă
    Dariia Kholiavchuk
    Iulian Horea Holobâcă
    Oles Ridush
    Csaba Horváth
    Bogdan Ridush
    Flaviu Meseşan
    Olimpiu Traian Pop
    [J]. Natural Hazards, 2022, 114 : 2041 - 2057
  • [4] Tree-ring records of snow-avalanche activity in the Rodna Mountains (Eastern Carpathians, Romania)
    Gavrila, Ionela Georgiana
    Kholiavchuk, Dariia
    Holobaca, Iulian Horea
    Ridush, Oles
    Horvath, Csaba
    Ridush, Bogdan
    Mesesan, Flaviu
    Pop, Olimpiu Traian
    [J]. NATURAL HAZARDS, 2022, 114 (02) : 2041 - 2057
  • [5] The influence of environmental conditions on tree-ring series of Norway spruce for different canopy and vitality classes
    vandenBrakel, JA
    Visser, H
    [J]. FOREST SCIENCE, 1996, 42 (02) : 206 - 219
  • [6] Temperature reconstruction from tree-ring maximum density of Balfour spruce in eastern Tibet, China
    Wang, Lily
    Duan, Jianping
    Chen, Jin
    Huang, Lei
    Shao, Xuemei
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2010, 30 (07) : 972 - 979
  • [7] Dependence of tree-ring, earlywood and latewood indices of Scots pine and Norway spruce on climatic factors in eastern Finland
    Miina, J
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2000, 132 (03) : 259 - 273
  • [8] Tree-ring widths as an indicator of air pollution stress and climate conditions in different Norway spruce forest stands in the Krkonose Mts.
    Putalova, Tereza
    Vacek, Zdenek
    Vacek, Stanislav
    Stefancik, Igor
    Bulusek, Daniel
    Kral, Jan
    [J]. CENTRAL EUROPEAN FORESTRY JOURNAL, 2019, 65 (01) : 21 - 33
  • [9] Different climate response of three tree ring proxies of Pinus sylvestris from the Eastern Carpathians, Romania
    Nagavciuc, Viorica
    Roibu, Catalin-Constantin
    Ionita, Monica
    Mursa, Andrei
    Cotos, Mihai-Gabriel
    Popa, Ionel
    [J]. DENDROCHRONOLOGIA, 2019, 54 : 56 - 63
  • [10] HISTORICAL TRENDS IN TREE-RING GROWTH AND CHEMISTRY ACROSS AN AIR-QUALITY GRADIENT IN WISCONSIN
    FRELICH, LE
    BOCKHEIM, JG
    LEIDE, JE
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE RECHERCHE FORESTIERE, 1989, 19 (01): : 113 - 121