| Literature DB >> 33508887 |
Jesús Julio Camarero1, Antonio Gazol1, Raúl Sánchez-Salguero1,2, Alex Fajardo3, Eliot J B McIntire4, Emilia Gutiérrez5, Enric Batllori5,6, Stéphane Boudreau7, Marco Carrer8, Jeff Diez9, Geneviève Dufour-Tremblay7, Narayan P Gaire10,11, Annika Hofgaard12, Vincent Jomelli13, Alexander V Kirdyanov14,15, Esther Lévesque16, Eryuan Liang17, Juan Carlos Linares2, Ingrid E Mathisen18, Pavel A Moiseev19, Gabriel Sangüesa-Barreda20, Krishna B Shrestha21, Johanna M Toivonen22, Olga V Tutubalina23, Martin Wilmking24.
Abstract
Climate warming is expected to positively alter upward and poleward treelines which are controlled by low temperature and a short growing season. Despite the importance of treelines as a bioassay of climate change, a global field assessment and posterior forecasting of tree growth at annual scales is lacking. Using annually resolved tree-ring data located across Eurasia and the Americas, we quantified and modeled the relationship between temperature and radial growth at treeline during the 20th century. We then tested whether this temperature-growth association will remain stable during the 21st century using a forward model under two climate scenarios (RCP 4.5 and 8.5). During the 20th century, growth enhancements were common in most sites, and temperature and growth showed positive trends. Interestingly, the relationship between temperature and growth trends was contingent on tree age suggesting biogeographic patterns in treeline growth are contingent on local factors besides climate warming. Simulations forecast temperature-growth decoupling during the 21st century. The growing season at treeline is projected to lengthen and growth rates would increase and become less dependent on temperature rise. These forecasts illustrate how growth may decouple from climate warming in cold regions and near the margins of tree existence. Such projected temperature-growth decoupling could impact ecosystem processes in mountain and polar biomes, with feedbacks on climate warming.Entities:
Keywords: climate warming; forest limit; growth model; mountain ecosystems; tree rings
Year: 2021 PMID: 33508887 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863