Spatio‐temporal patterns of tree growth as related to carbon isotope fractionation in European forests under changing climate

Autor/a

Shestakova, Tatiana A.

Voltas Velasco, Jordi

Saurer, Matthias

Berninger, Frank

Esper, Jan

Andreu-Hayles, Laia

Daux, Valérie

Helle, Gerhard

Leuenberger, Markus

Loader, Neil J.

Masson‐Delmotte, Valérie

Saracino, Antonio

Waterhouse, John S.

Schleser, Gerhard H.

Bednarz, Zdzisław

Boettger, Tatjana

Dorado-Liñán, Isabel

Filot, Marc

Frank, David

Grabner, Michael

Haupt, Marika

Hilasvuori, Emmi

Jungner, Högne

Kalela‐Brundin, Maarit

Krąpiec, Marek

Marah, Hamid

Pawełczyk, S.

Pazdur, Anna

Pierre, Monique

Planells, Octavi

Pukienė, R.

Reynolds-Henne, Christina E.

Rinne‐Garmston(Rinne), Katja T.

Rita, Angelo

Sonninen, Eloni

Stiévenard, Michel

Switsur, Vincent R.

Szychowska‐Krapiec, Elżbieta

Szymaszek, Malgorzata

Todaro, Luigi

Treydte, Kerstin

Vitas, Adomas

Weigl, Martin

Wimmer, Rupert

Gutiérrez, Emilia

Data de publicació

2020-01-15T12:57:00Z

2020-06-07T22:09:04Z

2019

2020-01-15T12:57:00Z



Resum

Aim The aim was to decipher Europe‐wide spatio‐temporal patterns of forest growth dynamics and their associations with carbon isotope fractionation processes inferred from tree rings as modulated by climate warming. Location Europe and North Africa (30‒70° N, 10° W‒35° E). Time period 1901‒2003. Major taxa studied Temperate and Euro‐Siberian trees. Methods We characterize changes in the relationship between tree growth and carbon isotope fractionation over the 20th century using a European network consisting of 20 site chronologies. Using indexed tree‐ring widths (TRWi), we assess shifts in the temporal coherence of radial growth across sites (synchrony) for five forest ecosystems (Atlantic, boreal, cold continental, Mediterranean and temperate). We also examine whether TRWi shows variable coupling with leaf‐level gas exchange, inferred from indexed carbon isotope discrimination of tree‐ring cellulose (Δ13Ci). Results We find spatial autocorrelation for TRWi and Δ13Ci extending over a maximum of 1,000 km among forest stands. However, growth synchrony is not uniform across Europe, but increases along a latitudinal gradient concurrent with decreasing temperature and evapotranspiration. Latitudinal relationships between TRWi and Δ13Ci (changing from negative to positive southwards) point to drought impairing carbon uptake via stomatal regulation for water saving occurring at forests below 60° N in continental Europe. An increase in forest growth synchrony over the 20th century together with increasingly positive relationships between TRWi and Δ13Ci indicate intensifying impacts of drought on tree performance. These effects are noticeable in drought‐prone biomes (Mediterranean, temperate and cold continental). Main conclusions At the turn of this century, convergence in growth synchrony across European forest ecosystems is coupled with coordinated warming‐induced effects of drought on leaf physiology and tree growth spreading northwards. Such a tendency towards exacerbated moisture‐sensitive growth and physiology could override positive effects of enhanced leaf intercellular CO2 concentrations, possibly resulting in Europe‐wide declines of forest carbon gain in the coming decades.


Spanish Government, Grant/Award Number: AGL2015‐68274 ‐C3 ‐3‐R; Sixth Framework Programme, Grant/AwardNumber: EVK2‐2001 ‐00237; Seventh Framework Programme, Grant/AwardNumber: COST ‐STSM ‐ECOST ‐STSM ‐FP1304‐140915‐066395 and ERANET‐Mundus program (Grant agreement 20112573)

Tipus de document

Article
Versió acceptada

Llengua

Anglès

Matèries i paraules clau

Tree rings; Carbon isotopes; Climate change; Dendroecology; European forests

Publicat per

John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Documents relacionats

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO//AGL2015-68274-C3-3-R/ES/APROXIMACIONES ECOFISIOLOGICAS Y RESPUESTA AL CLIMA EN PINOS MEDITERRANEOS: RELEVANCIA PARA LA GESTION FUTURA DE SUS RECURSOS GENETICOS/

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.12933

Global Ecology and Biogeography, 2019, vol. 28, p. 1295-1309

Drets

(c) John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2019

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