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Climate warming differently affects Larix decidua ring formation at each end of a French Alps elevational gradient

Resumen
Key message The ongoing global warming tends to reduce Larix decidua radial growth and ring wood density at the bottom of an elevational gradient in the French Alps, while it has a less marked effect at the top. Context: The ongoing climate warming affects most tree species across their biogeographic distribution range. The bottom and the top of an elevational gradient are appropriate environments to observe the effect of climate warming in contrasted [ver mas...]
Key message The ongoing global warming tends to reduce Larix decidua radial growth and ring wood density at the bottom of an elevational gradient in the French Alps, while it has a less marked effect at the top. Context: The ongoing climate warming affects most tree species across their biogeographic distribution range. The bottom and the top of an elevational gradient are appropriate environments to observe the effect of climate warming in contrasted temperature conditions. Aims: To retrospectively study the effect of the ongoing climate warming on Larix decidua trees located in warm and cold conditions, i.e., at the bottom (1200 m) and the top (2300 m) of an elevational gradient, respectively. Methods: Dendroecological analysis of two groups of Larix decidua trees located at very low (1200 m) and very high (2300 m) elevations. Construction of climatic response curves for annual ring variables. Decomposition of the variance of the response models into their high and low frequency components. Results: At Briançon, in the French Alps, the increase of the daily maximum temperature during the last 50 years is already almost 3 °C for the March–October period. The results reveal contrasted behaviors at both ends of the investigated elevational gradient. Basal area increment, ring width, and their earlywood and latewood components increase or level off at the top of the gradient, while they all strongly decrease at the bottom. At the bottom, the low frequency warming effect explains the recent ring width decrease, with no influence of the high frequency temperature variation. At the top, both the low frequency warming effect and the high frequency temperature effect explain each about half of the ring width variation encompassed by the model. Latewood density displays the same trend as ring width, while earlywood density decreases at both ends of the gradient. Conclusion: Such opposed trends of the radial growth time trends between the top (2300 m) and the bottom (1200 m) of the gradient reflects the respectively favorable and unfavorable effects of climate warming at such ends of this Larix decidua elevational gradient. We propose that the strong ring width decrease observed at the warmer bottom announces a coming dieback. The corresponding wood density decrease will affect wood hydraulic properties in a way that is unclear. [Cerrar]
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Autor
Rozenberg, Philippe;   Chauvin, Thibaud;   Escobar-Sandoval, Margarita;   Huard, Frédéric;   Shishov, Vladimir;   Charpentier, Jean-Paul;   Sergent, Anne Sophie;   Vargas-Hernandez, José Jesus;   Martinez Meier, Alejandro;   Pâques, Luc;  
Fuente
Annals of Forest Science 77 : art. 54 (June 2020)
Fecha
2020-06
Editorial
Springer
ISSN
1286-4560
1297-966X
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/7420
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13595-020-00958-w
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13595-020-00958-w
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Larix decidua; Pinales; Anillo de Crecimiento; Growth Rings; Bosques; Forests; Cambio Climático; Climate Change; Adaptación al Cambio Climático; Climate Change Adaptation; Gradientes Altitudinales;
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Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
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