1. Tree-ring isotopes reveal drought sensitivity in trees killed by spruce beetle outbreaks in south-central Alaska.
- Author
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Csank, Adam Z., Miller, Amy E., Sherriff, Rosemary L., Berg, Edward E., and Welker, Jeffrey M.
- Subjects
WHITE spruce ,TREE-rings ,TREE mortality ,SPRUCE beetle ,EFFECT of drought on plants - Abstract
Increasing temperatures have resulted in reduced growth and increased tree mortality across large areas of western North American forests. We use tree-ring isotope chronologies (δ
13 C and δ18 O) from live and dead trees from four locations in south-central Alaska, USA, to test whether white spruce trees killed by recent spruce beetle ( Dendroctonus rufipennis Kirby) outbreaks showed evidence of drought stress prior to death. Trees that were killed were more sensitive to spring/summer temperature and/or precipitation than trees that survived. At two of our sites, we found greater correlations between the δ13 C and δ18 O chronologies and spring/summer temperatures in dead trees than in live trees, suggesting that trees that are more sensitive to temperature-induced drought stress are more likely to be killed. At one site, the difference between δ13 C in live and dead trees was related to winter/spring precipitation, with dead trees showing stronger correlations between δ13 C and precipitation, again suggesting increased water stress in dead trees. At all sites where δ18 O was measured, δ18 O chronologies showed the greatest difference in climate response between live and dead groups, with δ18 O in live trees correlating more strongly with late winter precipitation than dead trees. Our results indicate that sites where trees are already sensitive to warm or dry early growing-season conditions experienced the most beetle-kill, which has important implications for forecasting future mortality events in Alaska. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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