Literature DB >> 29460369

Drought timing and local climate determine the sensitivity of eastern temperate forests to drought.

Loïc D'Orangeville1,2, Justin Maxwell3, Daniel Kneeshaw2, Neil Pederson4, Louis Duchesne5, Travis Logan6, Daniel Houle5,6, Dominique Arseneault7, Colin M Beier8, Daniel A Bishop9, Daniel Druckenbrod10, Shawn Fraver11, François Girard12, Joshua Halman13, Chris Hansen14, Justin L Hart15, Henrik Hartmann16, Margot Kaye17, David Leblanc18, Stefano Manzoni19, Rock Ouimet5, Shelly Rayback20, Christine R Rollinson21, Richard P Phillips1.   

Abstract

Projected changes in temperature and drought regime are likely to reduce carbon (C) storage in forests, thereby amplifying rates of climate change. While such reductions are often presumed to be greatest in semi-arid forests that experience widespread tree mortality, the consequences of drought may also be important in temperate mesic forests of Eastern North America (ENA) if tree growth is significantly curtailed by drought. Investigations of the environmental conditions that determine drought sensitivity are critically needed to accurately predict ecosystem feedbacks to climate change. We matched site factors with the growth responses to drought of 10,753 trees across mesic forests of ENA, representing 24 species and 346 stands, to determine the broad-scale drivers of drought sensitivity for the dominant trees in ENA. Here we show that two factors-the timing of drought, and the atmospheric demand for water (i.e., local potential evapotranspiration; PET)-are stronger drivers of drought sensitivity than soil and stand characteristics. Drought-induced reductions in tree growth were greatest when the droughts occurred during early-season peaks in radial growth, especially for trees growing in the warmest, driest regions (i.e., highest PET). Further, mean species trait values (rooting depth and ψ50 ) were poor predictors of drought sensitivity, as intraspecific variation in sensitivity was equal to or greater than interspecific variation in 17 of 24 species. From a general circulation model ensemble, we find that future increases in early-season PET may exacerbate these effects, and potentially offset gains in C uptake and storage in ENA owing to other global change factors.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  climate change; drought; evapotranspiration; forest ecology; phenology; temperate forest; tree-ring

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29460369     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14096

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  12 in total

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4.  Peak radial growth of diffuse-porous species occurs during periods of lower water availability than for ring-porous and coniferous trees.

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6.  Twentieth century redistribution in climatic drivers of global tree growth.

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9.  The 2018 European heatwave led to stem dehydration but not to consistent growth reductions in forests.

Authors:  Roberto L Salomón; Richard L Peters; Roman Zweifel; Ute G W Sass-Klaassen; Annemiek I Stegehuis; Marko Smiljanic; Rafael Poyatos; Flurin Babst; Emil Cienciala; Patrick Fonti; Bas J W Lerink; Marcus Lindner; Jordi Martinez-Vilalta; Maurizio Mencuccini; Gert-Jan Nabuurs; Ernst van der Maaten; Georg von Arx; Andreas Bär; Linar Akhmetzyanov; Daniel Balanzategui; Michal Bellan; Jörg Bendix; Daniel Berveiller; Miroslav Blaženec; Vojtěch Čada; Vinicio Carraro; Sébastien Cecchini; Tommy Chan; Marco Conedera; Nicolas Delpierre; Sylvain Delzon; Ľubica Ditmarová; Jiri Dolezal; Eric Dufrêne; Johannes Edvardsson; Stefan Ehekircher; Alicia Forner; Jan Frouz; Andrea Ganthaler; Vladimír Gryc; Aylin Güney; Ingo Heinrich; Rainer Hentschel; Pavel Janda; Marek Ježík; Hans-Peter Kahle; Simon Knüsel; Jan Krejza; Łukasz Kuberski; Jiří Kučera; François Lebourgeois; Martin Mikoláš; Radim Matula; Stefan Mayr; Walter Oberhuber; Nikolaus Obojes; Bruce Osborne; Teemu Paljakka; Roman Plichta; Inken Rabbel; Cyrille B K Rathgeber; Yann Salmon; Matthew Saunders; Tobias Scharnweber; Zuzana Sitková; Dominik Florian Stangler; Krzysztof Stereńczak; Marko Stojanović; Katarína Střelcová; Jan Světlík; Miroslav Svoboda; Brian Tobin; Volodymyr Trotsiuk; Josef Urban; Fernando Valladares; Hanuš Vavrčík; Monika Vejpustková; Lorenz Walthert; Martin Wilmking; Ewa Zin; Junliang Zou; Kathy Steppe
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-01-10       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  Drought timing and species growth phenology determine intra-annual recovery of tree height and diameter growth.

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