90 results on '"Čufar, K."'
Search Results
2. The palaeoclimatic potential of recent oak tree-ring width chronologies from southwest Ukraine
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Sochová, Irena, Kolář, Tomáš, Árvai, M., Bošeľa, M., Čufar, K., Kern, Z., Kyncl, J., Marčiš, P., Mészáros, I., Morgós, A., Mursa, A., Popa, A., Roibu, C-C., Sopushynskyy, I., Rybníček, Michal, Sochová, Irena, Kolář, Tomáš, Árvai, M., Bošeľa, M., Čufar, K., Kern, Z., Kyncl, J., Marčiš, P., Mészáros, I., Morgós, A., Mursa, A., Popa, A., Roibu, C-C., Sopushynskyy, I., and Rybníček, Michal
- Abstract
Better insights into spatio-temporal climate signals are needed to understand more clearly the applicability to palaeoclimatic analysis and dendrochronological dating of the long tree-ring oak chronologies currently being compiled in Eastern Europe. This study investigates the climate sensitivity of two recent oak tree-ring width (TRW) chronologies from Transcarpathian and Ciscarpathian Ukraine and their coherence with 35 oak chronologies from Ukraine, Poland, Slovakia, Romania, and Hungary. The new Transcarpathian chronology consists of 247 TRW series of living trees from 13 sites covering the period 1836-2020, while the new Ciscarpathian chronology consists of 215 TRW series from 13 sites and spans the period 1775-2020. Despite the strong similarity between these two chronologies, their responses to climate differ significantly. Growing-season precipitation and particularly drought (three-month SPEI index) were found to be the primary drivers of oak growth on the border between the Carpathians and the northeastern Pannonian Basin. Spatial correlations of the Transcarpathian chronology show particularly high explained variability in the April-August SPEI index, roughly between 18.5-28.5oE and 45-52oN. In the Ciscarpathian, June precipitation primarily influenced oak radial growth but the spatial correlation was quite low. While the Transcarpathian TRW chronology was strongly correlated with eastern Slovakian and northwestern Romanian chronologies, the Ciscarpathian chronology revealed very low correlations with surrounding chronologies. This study indicates the great dendroarchaeological and palaeoclimatic potential of the Transcarpathian chronology and points to the need to analyse additional living trees from the Ciscarpathian region to understand the spatial variability of oak growth and its climate signal better.
- Published
- 2024
3. Xylogenesis reveals the genesis and ecological signal of IADFs in Pinus pinea L. and Arbutus unedo L.
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Balzano, A., Čufar, K., Battipaglia, G., Merela, M., Prislan, P., Aronne, G., and De Micco, V.
- Published
- 2018
4. Structural and acoustic properties of African padouk (Pterocarpus soyauxii) wood for xylophones
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Straže, A., Mitkovski, B., Tippner, J., Čufar, K., and Gorišek, Ž.
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- 2015
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5. Seasonal dynamics of phloem and xylem formation in silver fir and Norway spruce as affected by drought
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Gričar, J. and Čufar, K.
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- 2008
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6. Age, climate and intra-annual density fluctuations in Pinus halepensis in Spain
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Novak, K., primary, Sánchez, M.A. Saz, additional, Čufar, K., additional, Raventós, J., additional, and de Luis, M., additional
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- 2013
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7. Review of cellular and subcellular changes in cambium
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Prislan, P., primary, Čufar, K., additional, Koch, G., additional, Schmitt, U., additional, and Gričar, J., additional
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- 2013
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8. Trampling as a major ecological factor affecting the radial growth and wood anatomy of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) roots on a hiking trail
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Matulewski, P., primary, Buchwal, A., additional, Zielonka, A., additional, Wrońska-Wałach, D., additional, Čufar, K., additional, and Gärtner, H., additional
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- 2021
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9. FUNCTIONAL TRAITS IN WOOD ANAT OMY
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Baas, P., Beeckman, H., Čufar, K., DE MICCO, VERONICA, Baas, P., Beeckman, H., Čufar, K., and DE MICCO, Veronica
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Forestry ,Plant Science - Published
- 2016
10. Mexican tropical hardwoods: machinability, nailing and screwing
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Torelli, N. and Čufar, K.
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- 1996
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11. A synthesis of radial growth patterns preceding tree mortality
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Cailleret, M., Jansen, S., Robert, E. M. R., Desoto, L., Aakala, T., Antos, J. A., Beikircher, B., Bigler, C., Bugmann, H., Caccianiga, M., Čada, V., Camarero, J. J., Cherubini, P., Cochard, H., Coyea, M. R., Čufar, K., Das, A. J., Davi, H., Delzon, S., Dorman, M., Gea Izquierdo, Guillermo, Gillner, S., Haavik, L. J., Hartmann, H., Hereş, A. M., Hultine, K. R., Janda, P., Kane, J. M., Kharuk, V. I., Kitzberger, T., Klein, T., Kramer, K., Lens, F., Levanic, T., Linares Calderon, J. C., Lloret, F., Lobo-Do-Vale, R., Lombardi, F., López Rodríguez, R., Mäkinen, H., Mayr, S., Mészáros, I., Metsaranta, J. M., Minunno, F., Oberhuber, W., Papadopoulos, A., Peltoniemi, M., Petritan, A. M., Rohner, B., Sangüesa-Barreda, G., Sarris, D., Smith, J. M., Stan, A. B., Sterck, F., Stojanović, D. B., Suarez, M. L., Svoboda, M., Tognetti, R., Torres-Ruiz, J. M., Trotsiuk, V., Villalba, R., Vodde, F., Westwood, A. R., Wyckoff, P. H., Zafirov, N., Martínez-Vilalta, J., Cailleret, M., Jansen, S., Robert, E. M. R., Desoto, L., Aakala, T., Antos, J. A., Beikircher, B., Bigler, C., Bugmann, H., Caccianiga, M., Čada, V., Camarero, J. J., Cherubini, P., Cochard, H., Coyea, M. R., Čufar, K., Das, A. J., Davi, H., Delzon, S., Dorman, M., Gea Izquierdo, Guillermo, Gillner, S., Haavik, L. J., Hartmann, H., Hereş, A. M., Hultine, K. R., Janda, P., Kane, J. M., Kharuk, V. I., Kitzberger, T., Klein, T., Kramer, K., Lens, F., Levanic, T., Linares Calderon, J. C., Lloret, F., Lobo-Do-Vale, R., Lombardi, F., López Rodríguez, R., Mäkinen, H., Mayr, S., Mészáros, I., Metsaranta, J. M., Minunno, F., Oberhuber, W., Papadopoulos, A., Peltoniemi, M., Petritan, A. M., Rohner, B., Sangüesa-Barreda, G., Sarris, D., Smith, J. M., Stan, A. B., Sterck, F., Stojanović, D. B., Suarez, M. L., Svoboda, M., Tognetti, R., Torres-Ruiz, J. M., Trotsiuk, V., Villalba, R., Vodde, F., Westwood, A. R., Wyckoff, P. H., Zafirov, N., and Martínez-Vilalta, J.
- Abstract
Tree mortality is a key factor influencing forest functions and dynamics, but our understanding of the mechanisms leading to mortality and the associated changes in tree growth rates are still limited. We compiled a new pan-continental tree-ring width database from sites where both dead and living trees were sampled (2970 dead and 4224 living trees from 190 sites, including 36 species), and compared early and recent growth rates between trees that died and those that survived a given mortality event. We observed a decrease in radial growth before death in ca. 84% of the mortality events. The extent and duration of these reductions were highly variable (1-100 years in 96% of events) due to the complex interactions among study species and the source(s) of mortality. Strong and long-lasting declines were found for gymnosperms, shade- and drought-tolerant species, and trees that died from competition. Angiosperms and trees that died due to biotic attacks (especially bark-beetles) typically showed relatively small and short-term growth reductions. Our analysis did not highlight any universal trade-off between early growth and tree longevity within a species, although this result may also reflect high variability in sampling design among sites. The intersite and interspecific variability in growth patterns before mortality provides valuable information on the nature of the mortality process, which is consistent with our understanding of the physiological mechanisms leading to mortality. Abrupt changes in growth immediately before death can be associated with generalized hydraulic failure and/or bark-beetle attack, while long-term decrease in growth may be associated with a gradual decline in hydraulic performance coupled with depletion in carbon reserves. Our results imply that growth-based mortality algorithms may be a powerful tool for predicting gymnosperm mortality induced by chronic stress, but not necessarily so for angiosperms and in case of intense drought or bark
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- 2017
12. Towards a common methodology for developing logistic tree mortality models based on ring‐width data
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Cailleret, M., Bigler, C., Bugmann, H., Camarero, J. J., Čufar, K., Davi, H., Mészáros, I., Minunno, F., Peltoniemi, M., Robert, E. M. R., Suarez, M. L., Roberto Tognetti, and Martínez‐vilalta, J.
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- 2016
13. Mexican tropical hardwoods. pH-value
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Torelli, N. and Čufar, K.
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- 1995
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14. Mexican tropical hardwoods. Comparative study of ash and silica content
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Torelli, N. and Čufar, K.
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- 1995
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15. Tree-Ring Chronology of Pedunculate Oak (Quercus robur) and its Potential for Development of Dendrochronological Research in Croatia
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Čufar, K., Šefc, B., De Luis, M., Morgos, A., Grabner, M., Merela, M., and Trajković, J.
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dendrochronology ,pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) ,dendroclimatology ,teleconnection ,heteroconnection ,dendrokronologija ,hrast lužnjak (Quercus robur) ,dendroklimatologija ,telekonekcija ,heterokonekcija - Abstract
We present the local tree-ring chronology of pedunculate oak (Qercus robur) from Kobiljak near Zagreb, Croatia (16º09’ E, 45º49’ N, 140 m a.s.l.). The chronology is based on 17 trees and is 127 years long and covers the period of 1883-2009. The well replicated part of the residual version of the ARSTAN chronology with SSS>0.80 (interval of 88 years, period 1922-2009) was used for dendroclimatological analysis, which showed that June precipitation has positive and temperature has negative effect on tree-ring variation. Comparison with 40 available oak chronologies from the surrounding countries confi rmed its good teleconnection with 2 local oak chronologies from Austria, 2 from Hungary, and 3 from Slovenia. It also exhibits good heteroconnection, i.e. similarity with chronologies of beech (Fagus sylvatica), from various sites in Slovenia. The similarities can be ascribed to response to common climatic factors. The results indicate that the chronology could be a good reference point for constructing a longer regional chronology in Croatia and surrounding countries, which could be used for different purposes including dating of objects of cultural heritage., U radu je predstavljena lokalna kronologija godova hrasta lužnjaka (Qercus robur) iz Kobiljaka pokraj Zagreba, Hrvatska (16º09’ E, 45º49’ N, 140 m n.m.). Temelji se na 17 stabala i obuhvaća 127 godina, i to razdoblje od 1883. do 2009. Za dendroklimatološku analizu primijenjen je optimalan replicirani dio rezidualne inačice kronologije ARSTAN sa SSS>0,80 (dužina 88 godine, razdoblje 1922. – 2009.). Analiza je pokazala pozitivan učinak lipanjskih oborina na promjene širine godova, dok je učinak temperature u istome mjesecu negativan. Usporedba s 40 dostupnih hrastovih kronologija iz okolnih zemalja potvrdila je telekonekciju s dvije lokalne kronologije hrasta iz Austrije, dvije iz Mađarske i tri iz Slovenije. Ona također pokazuje dobru heterokonekciju, tj. sličnost s kronologijama bukve (Fagus sylvatica) s različitih staništa u Sloveniji. Sličnosti se mogu pripisati odgovoru na zajedničke klimatske čimbenike. Rezultati upućuju na zaključak da ta kronologija može biti dobro polazište za izradu dulje regionalne kronologije hrasta u Hrvatskoj i susjednim državama, koja bi onda mogla imati različite namjene, uključivši i datiranje objekata kulturne baštine.
- Published
- 2014
16. Schleimzellen in der Rinde und traumatische Harzkanäle sterbender Tannen
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Torelli, N., Oven, P., Zupančič, M., Križaj, B., and Čufar, K.
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- 1992
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17. Bioelectrical resistance and its seasonal variation as the indicator of tree condition as illustrated by silver fir (Abies alba Mill.)
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Torelli, N., Kržaj, B., Oven, P., Zupanĉiĉ, M., and Čufar, K.
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- 1992
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18. Frequency and variability of missing tree rings along the stems of Pinus halepensis and Pinus pinea from a semiarid site in SE Spain
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Novak, K., de Luis, M., Čufar, K., and Raventós, J.
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- 2011
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19. Cambial activity and wood formation in beech (Fagus sylvatica) during the 2006 growth season
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Čufar, K., Peter Prislan, and Gričar, J.
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structure and properties of wood ,WOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY - Abstract
Cambial seasonal activity and the dynamics of xylem growth ring formation were studied during the 2006 growth season in mature beech (Fagus sylvatica) trees at a forest stand near Ljubljana, Slovenia. Cross-sections of tissues taken from living trees at weekly intervals were studied with light microscope. Cambial cell divisions began between 18 and 24 April, the cambium achieved maximum width (10-13 cell layers) at the end of May, and cell divisions ceased between 25 July and 16 August. Dormant cambium contained 3 to 5 cell layers. Fitting xylem increments to the Gompertz function showed that the period of most intense cell production was from 30 May to 6 June 2006. Th e average width of fully formed xylem growth rings was 2552 μm, and the time necessary for their formation was 100 days. Although the investigated trees were healthy and of comparable age, the parameters of the Gompertz function showed diff erences in radial growth patterns among trees.
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- 2008
20. Some Wood Anatomical, Physiological, and Silvicultural Aspects of Silver Fir Dieback in Slovenia (NW Yugoslavia)
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Torelli, N., Čufar, K., and Robič, D.
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- 1986
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21. Črnelnik and Devce, newly discovered copper age sites at Ljubljansko barje,Črnelnik in Devce, novoodkriti najdišči iz bakrene dobe na Ljubljanskem barju
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Velušček, A., Podpečan, B., Tolar, T., Toškan, B., Turk, J., Maks Merela, and Čufar, K.
22. Seasonal dynamics of wood formation in Pinus halepensis from dryand semi-arid ecosystems in Spain
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Luis, M., Gričar, J., Čufar, K., and Jose Raventos
23. Structure and Function of Intra–Annual Density Fluctuations: Mind the Gaps
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Battipaglia, G., Campelo, F., Vieira, J., Grabner, M., De Micco V., Nabais, C., Cherubini, P., Carrer, M., Bräuning, A., Čufar, K., Di, Filippo A., García-González, I., Koprowski, M., Klisz, M., Kirdyanov, A. V., Zafirov, N., de Luis M., Battipaglia, G., Campelo, F., Vieira, J., Grabner, M., De Micco V., Nabais, C., Cherubini, P., Carrer, M., Bräuning, A., Čufar, K., Di, Filippo A., García-González, I., Koprowski, M., Klisz, M., Kirdyanov, A. V., Zafirov, N., and de Luis M.
24. Photoperiod and temperature as dominant environmental drivers triggering secondary growth resumption in Northern Hemisphere conifers
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Gregory King, Peter Prislan, Emanuele Ziaco, Martin de Luis, Andreas Gruber, Xiali Guo, Hanuš Vavrčík, Patrick Fonti, Joana Vieira, Edurne Martínez del Castillo, Alessio Giovannelli, Audrey Lemay, Sergio Rossi, Yves Bergeron, Vladimír Gryc, Yaling Zhang, J. Julio Camarero, Walter Oberhuber, Feng Liu, Biyun Yu, Filipe Campelo, Roberto Tognetti, Irene Swidrak, Antonio Saracino, Shaokang Zhang, Pekka Nöjd, Wei Huang, Eryuan Liang, Cristina Nabais, Serena Antonucci, Václav Treml, Cyrille B. K. Rathgeber, Henri E. Cuny, Tuula Jyske, Harri Mäkinen, Qianqian Ma, Katarina Čufar, Hubert Morin, Annie Deslauriers, Jakub Kašpar, Jožica Gričar, Bao Yang, Qiao Zeng, Jiao Lin Zhang, Cornelia Krause, Franco Biondi, Richard L. Peters, Jianguo Huang, Aylin Güney, Fabio Lombardi, SILVA (SILVA), AgroParisTech-Université de Lorraine (UL)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)41861124001416611440073197149941525001International Collaborative Key Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) GJHZ1752National Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province2019B121202007CAS President's International Fellowship Initiative 2019VBA0049Austrian Science Fund (FWF)P22280-B16P25643-B16Consortium de Recherche sur la Foret Boreale Commerciale Fonds de Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologies du Quebec Foret d'Enseignement et de Recherche Simoncouche Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)CGIAR Slovenian Research Agency - SloveniaP4-0015P4-0107Z4-7318Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research-PRIN 2002 2002075152Ministry of Education, Universities and Research (MIUR)Research Projects of National Relevance (PRIN)2005072877Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)European CommissionINTEGRAL-121859LOTFOR-150205French National Research Agency (ANR)ANR-11-LABX-0002-01Academy of FinlandEuropean Commission250299257641265504Grant Agency of the Czech RepublicP504/11/P557Provincia Autonoma di Trento (Project 'SOFIE 2') 3012/2007National Science Foundation (NSF)AGS-P2C2-1903561European Union Cooperation in Science and Technology FP1106, Huang, J-G, Ma, Q, Rossi, S, Biondi, F, Deslauriers, A, Fonti, P, Liang, E, Mäkinen, H, Oberhuber, W, Rathgeber, Cbk, Tognetti, R, Treml, V, Yang, B, Zhang, J-L, Antonucci, S, Bergeron, Y, Camarero, Jj, Campelo, F, Čufar, K, Cuny, He, De Luis, M, Giovannelli, A, Gričar, J, Gruber, A, Gryc, V, Güney, A, Guo, X, Huang, W, Jyske, T, Kašpar, J, King, G, Krause, C, Lemay, A, Liu, F, Lombardi, F, Martinez del Castillo, E, Morin, H, Nabais, C, Nöjd, P, Peters, Rl, Prislan, P, Saracino, A, Swidrak, I, Vavrčík, H, Vieira, J, Yu, B, Zhang, S, Zeng, Q, Zhang, Y, and Ziaco, E
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0106 biological sciences ,Biogeochemical cycle ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Climate ,Climate Change ,Photoperiod ,Biome ,Meristem growth ,cambium ,Forests ,01 natural sciences ,complex mixtures ,Global Warming ,Models, Biological ,Trees ,[SPI]Engineering Sciences [physics] ,Xylem ,Forest ecology ,Ecosystem ,global change ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,xylogenesis ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,Northern Hemisphere conifer ,Phenology ,Global warming ,Northern Hemisphere ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Temperature ,Vegetation ,xylogenesis, wood formation, photoperiod, temperature, Northern Hemisphere, conifer ,15. Life on land ,Biological Sciences ,Wood ,Tracheophyta ,13. Climate action ,Environmental science ,wood formation ,Seasons ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Significance Forest trees can live for hundreds to thousands of years, and they play a critical role in mitigating global warming by fixing approximately 15% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions annually by wood formation. However, the environmental factors triggering wood formation onset in springtime and the cellular mechanisms underlying this onset remain poorly understood, since wood forms beneath the bark and is difficult to monitor. We report that the onset of wood formation in Northern Hemisphere conifers is driven primarily by photoperiod and mean annual temperature. Understanding the unique relationships between exogenous factors and wood formation could aid in predicting how forest ecosystems respond and adapt to climate warming, while improving the assessment of long-term and high-resolution observations of global biogeochemical cycles., Wood formation consumes around 15% of the anthropogenic CO2 emissions per year and plays a critical role in long-term sequestration of carbon on Earth. However, the exogenous factors driving wood formation onset and the underlying cellular mechanisms are still poorly understood and quantified, and this hampers an effective assessment of terrestrial forest productivity and carbon budget under global warming. Here, we used an extensive collection of unique datasets of weekly xylem tissue formation (wood formation) from 21 coniferous species across the Northern Hemisphere (latitudes 23 to 67°N) to present a quantitative demonstration that the onset of wood formation in Northern Hemisphere conifers is primarily driven by photoperiod and mean annual temperature (MAT), and only secondarily by spring forcing, winter chilling, and moisture availability. Photoperiod interacts with MAT and plays the dominant role in regulating the onset of secondary meristem growth, contrary to its as-yet-unquantified role in affecting the springtime phenology of primary meristems. The unique relationships between exogenous factors and wood formation could help to predict how forest ecosystems respond and adapt to climate warming and could provide a better understanding of the feedback occurring between vegetation and climate that is mediated by phenology. Our study quantifies the role of major environmental drivers for incorporation into state-of-the-art Earth system models (ESMs), thereby providing an improved assessment of long-term and high-resolution observations of biogeochemical cycles across terrestrial biomes.
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- 2020
25. Xylogenesis reveals the genesis and ecological signal of IADFs in Pinus pinea L. and Arbutus unedo L
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V. De Micco, Giovanna Battipaglia, Angela Balzano, Maks Merela, Giovanna Aronne, Katarina Čufar, Peter Prislan, Balzano, A, Čufar, K, Battipaglia, G, Merela, M, Prislan, P, Aronne, G, DE MICCO, Veronica, Balzano, Angela, Čufar, Katarina, Battipaglia, Giovanna, Merela, Mark, Prislan, Peter, Aronne, Giovanna, and De Micco, Veronica
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Mediterranean climate ,functional wood trait ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Plant Science ,01 natural sciences ,Trees ,Pinus pinea L ,Xylem ,Botany ,Dendrochronology ,Cambium ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Arbutus unedo ,Cambial activity ,Microscopy ,xylogenesi ,Ecology ,Plant Stems ,biology ,Original Articles ,tree ring ,Cambial activity, functional wood traits, intra-annual density fluctuations (IADFs), Pinus pinea L., Arbutus unedo L., tree rings, xylogenesis ,Pinus ,biology.organism_classification ,Wood ,%22">Pinus ,Productivity (ecology) ,Arbutus unedo L ,Tracheid ,intra-annual density fluctuations (IADFs) ,Ericaceae ,Seasons ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Mediterranean trees have patterns of cambial activity with one or more pauses per year, leading to intra-annual density fluctuations (IADFs) in tree rings. We analysed xylogenesis (January 2015–January 2016) in Pinus pinea L. and Arbutus unedo L., co-occurring at a site on Mt. Vesuvius (southern Italy), to identify the cambial productivity and timing of IADF formation. METHODS: Dendrochronological methods and quantitative wood anatomy were applied and enabled IADF identification and classification. KEY RESULTS: We showed that cambium in P. pinea was productive throughout the calendar year. From January to March 2015, post-cambial (enlarging) earlywood-like tracheids were observed, which were similar to transition tracheids. The beginning of the tree ring was therefore not marked by a sharp boundary between latewood of the previous year and the new xylem produced. True earlywood tracheids were formed in April. L-IADFs were formed in autumn, with earlywood-like cells in latewood. In A. unedo, a double pause in cell production was observed, in summer and winter, leading to L-IADFs in autumn as well. Moreover, the formation of more than one IADF was observed in A. unedo. CONCLUSIONS: Despite having completely different wood formation models and different life strategies, the production of earlywood, latewood and IADF cells was strongly controlled by climatic factors in the two species. Such cambial production patterns need to be taken into account in dendroecological studies to interpret climatic signals in wood from Mediterranean trees.
- Published
- 2018
26. Timing of False Ring Formation in Pinus halepensis and Arbutus unedo in Southern Italy: Outlook from an Analysis of Xylogenesis and Tree-Ring Chronologies
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Maks Merela, Jožica Gričar, Veronica De Micco, Angela Balzano, Giovanna Aronne, Giovanna Battipaglia, Katarina Čufar, DE MICCO, Veronica, Balzano, Angela, Čufar, K., Aronne, Giovanna, Gricar, J., Merela, M., Battipaglia, G., De Micco, Veronica, Čufar, Katarina, Gričar, Jožica, Merela, Mak, and Battipaglia, Giovanna
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0106 biological sciences ,Mediterranean climate ,intra-annual density fluctuations ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,cambial activity ,Plant Science ,lcsh:Plant culture ,01 natural sciences ,Plant science ,Intra-annual density fluctuations (IADF) ,Dendrochronology ,structure and properties of wood ,lcsh:SB1-1110 ,Intra-annual density fluctuation ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Arbutus unedo ,Original Research ,biology ,Ecology ,cambial phenology ,WOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ,biology.organism_classification ,%22">Pinus ,tree rings ,mediterranean climate ,Environmental science ,Tree ring ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Mediterranean tree rings are characterized by Intra-Annual Density Fluctuations (IADFs) due to partly climate-driven cambial activity. IADFs are used as structural signals to gain information on relations between environmental conditions and eco-physiological processes during xylogenesis, with intra-annual resolution. To reach an unbiased synchronization of the IADF position within tree rings and seasonal fluctuations in environmental conditions, it is necessary to know the timing of cambial activity and wood formation, which are species- and site-specific processes. We applied the microcoring technique to analyze xylogenesis in Pinus halepensis and Arbutus unedo. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first attempt to study xylogenesis in a hardwood species forming frequent IADFs. Both species co-occur at a site in southern Italy characterized by a Mediterranean climate. To facilitate tree-ring dating and identification of IADFs, we performed traditional dendroecological analysis. We analyzed xylogenesis during summer, which is considered a constraint for xylogenesis and a trigger for IADF formation. We followed the different phases of cell development in the current wood increment with the aim of evaluating whether and which type of IADFs were formed. We additionally analyzed the same phases again in September and in winter to verify the possible formation of IADFs in fall and whether cell production and differentiation was completed by the end of the calendar year. Both species formed the same type of IADFs (earlywood-like cells within latewood), due to temporary growth restoration triggered by rain events during the period of summer drought. At the end of the calendar year, no cells in the phases of enlargement and secondary cell wall deposition occurred. A. unedo was more sensitive than P. halepensis because IADFs were formed earlier in the season and were more frequent in the tree-ring series. The dendro-anatomical approach, combining analysis of tree-ring series and of xylogenesis, helped to detect the period of IADF formation in the two species. Results are discussed in functional terms, highlighting the environmental conditions triggering IADFs, and also in methodological terms, evaluating the applicability of xylogenesis analysis in Mediterranean woods, especially when the formation of IADFs is not uniform around the stem.
- Published
- 2016
27. Pattern of xylem phenology in conifers of cold ecosystems at the Northern Hemisphere
- Author
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Hubert Morin, David Frank, Gregory King, Eryuan Liang, Peter Prislan, Walter Oberhuber, Antonio Saracino, Václav Treml, Henri E. Cuny, Cyrille B. K. Rathgeber, Pekka Nöjd, Tuula Jyske, Cornelia Krause, Harri Mäkinen, Andreas Gruber, Jianguo Huang, Annie Deslauriers, Katarina Čufar, Sergio Rossi, Irene Swidrak, Jožica Gričar, Jakub Kašpar, Tommaso Anfodillo, Patrick Fonti, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC), Universita degli Studi di Padova, University of Ljubljana, Laboratoire d'Etudes des Ressources Forêt-Bois (LERFoB), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Avalanche Research WSL, Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research (OCCR), University of Bern, Slovenian Forestry Institute, University of Innsbruck, Chinese Academy of Sciences [Changchun Branch] (CAS), Natural Resources Institute Finland, Charles University, University of Naples Federico II, ANR (ANR-11-LABX-0002-0), AgroParisTech-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL, Natural resources institute Finland, Charles University [Prague] (CU), Rossi, S, Anfodillo, T, Čufar, K, Cuny, He, Deslauriers, A, Fonti, P, Frank, D, Gričar, J, Gruber, A, Huang, J. G, Jyske, T, Kašpar, J, King, G, Krause, C, Liang, E, Mäkinen, H, Morin, H, Nöjd, P, Oberhuber, W, Prislan, P, Rathgeber, Cbk, Saracino, Antonio, Swidrak, I, and Treml, V.
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,bois de résineux ,cambium, cell differentiation, cell production, climate change, conifers, growth, meristem, secondary wall formation ,xylem ,Atmospheric sciences ,01 natural sciences ,meristem ,Trees ,General Environmental Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,biology ,Phenology ,xylème ,facteur climatique ,phénologie ,Cold Temperature ,climate change ,softwood ,conifers ,Tracheid ,coniferous tree ,Seasons ,growth ,Plant Development ,Growing season ,cambium ,phenology ,Pinophyta ,formation du bois ,température ,Environmental Chemistry ,cell production ,[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biology ,secondary wall formation ,Ecosystem ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,conifère ,Scots pine ,Northern Hemisphere ,Xylem ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Black spruce ,Tracheophyta ,cell differentiation ,13. Climate action ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
The interaction between xylem phenology and climate assesses forest growth and productivity and carbon storage across biomes under changing environmental conditions. We tested the hypothesis that patterns of wood formation are maintained unaltered despite the temperature changes across cold ecosystems. Wood microcores were collected weekly or biweekly throughout the growing season for periods varying between 1 and 13 years during 1998–2014 and cut in transverse sections for assessing the onset and ending of the phases of xylem differentiation. The data set represented 1321 trees belonging to 10 conifer species from 39 sites in the Northern Hemisphere and covering an interval of mean annual temperature exceeding 14 K. The phenological events and mean annual temperature of the sites were related linearly, with spring and autumnal events being separated by constant intervals across the range of temperature analysed. At increasing temperature, first enlarging, wall-thickening and mature tracheids appeared earlier, and last enlarging and wall-thickening tracheids occurred later. Overall, the period of wood formation length- ened linearly with the mean annual temperature, from 83.7 days at -2 °C to 178.1 days at 12 °C, at a rate of 6.5 days °C-1. April–May temperatures produced the best models predicting the dates of wood formation. Our findings demonstrated the uniformity of the process of wood formation and the importance of the environmental conditions occurring at the time of growth resumption. Under warming scenarios, the period of wood formation might lengthen synchronously in the cold biomes of the Northern Hemisphere.
- Published
- 2016
28. No Future Growth Enhancement Expected at the Northern Edge for European Beech due to Continued Water Limitation.
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Klesse S, Peters RL, Alfaro-Sánchez R, Badeau V, Baittinger C, Battipaglia G, Bert D, Biondi F, Bosela M, Budeanu M, Čada V, Camarero JJ, Cavin L, Claessens H, Cretan AM, Čufar K, de Luis M, Dorado-Liñán I, Dulamsuren C, Espelta JM, Garamszegi B, Grabner M, Gricar J, Hacket-Pain A, Hansen JK, Hartl C, Hevia A, Hobi M, Janda P, Jump AS, Kašpar J, Kazimirović M, Keren S, Kreyling J, Land A, Latte N, Lebourgeois F, Leuschner C, Lévesque M, Longares LA, Del Castillo EM, Menzel A, Merela M, Mikoláš M, Motta R, Muffler L, Neycken A, Nola P, Panayotov M, Petritan AM, Petritan IC, Popa I, Prislan P, Levanič T, Roibu CC, Rubio-Cuadrado Á, Sánchez-Salguero R, Šamonil P, Stajić B, Svoboda M, Tognetti R, Toromani E, Trotsiuk V, van der Maaten E, van der Maaten-Theunissen M, Vannoppen A, Vašíčková I, von Arx G, Wilmking M, Weigel R, Zlatanov T, Zang C, and Buras A
- Subjects
- Europe, Droughts, Water metabolism, Temperature, Forests, Fagus growth & development, Fagus physiology, Climate Change
- Abstract
With ongoing global warming, increasing water deficits promote physiological stress on forest ecosystems with negative impacts on tree growth, vitality, and survival. How individual tree species will react to increased drought stress is therefore a key research question to address for carbon accounting and the development of climate change mitigation strategies. Recent tree-ring studies have shown that trees at higher latitudes will benefit from warmer temperatures, yet this is likely highly species-dependent and less well-known for more temperate tree species. Using a unique pan-European tree-ring network of 26,430 European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) trees from 2118 sites, we applied a linear mixed-effects modeling framework to (i) explain variation in climate-dependent growth and (ii) project growth for the near future (2021-2050) across the entire distribution of beech. We modeled the spatial pattern of radial growth responses to annually varying climate as a function of mean climate conditions (mean annual temperature, mean annual climatic water balance, and continentality). Over the calibration period (1952-2011), the model yielded high regional explanatory power (R
2 = 0.38-0.72). Considering a moderate climate change scenario (CMIP6 SSP2-4.5), beech growth is projected to decrease in the future across most of its distribution range. In particular, projected growth decreases by 12%-18% (interquartile range) in northwestern Central Europe and by 11%-21% in the Mediterranean region. In contrast, climate-driven growth increases are limited to around 13% of the current occurrence, where the historical mean annual temperature was below ~6°C. More specifically, the model predicts a 3%-24% growth increase in the high-elevation clusters of the Alps and Carpathian Arc. Notably, we find little potential for future growth increases (-10 to +2%) at the poleward leading edge in southern Scandinavia. Because in this region beech growth is found to be primarily water-limited, a northward shift in its distributional range will be constrained by water availability., (© 2024 The Author(s). Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2024
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29. Identifying drivers of non-stationary climate-growth relationships of European beech.
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Leifsson C, Buras A, Klesse S, Baittinger C, Bat-Enerel B, Battipaglia G, Biondi F, Stajić B, Budeanu M, Čada V, Cavin L, Claessens H, Čufar K, de Luis M, Dorado-Liñán I, Dulamsuren C, Garamszegi B, Grabner M, Hacket-Pain A, Hansen JK, Hartl C, Huang W, Janda P, Jump AS, Kazimirović M, Knutzen F, Kreyling J, Land A, Latte N, Lebourgeois F, Leuschner C, Longares LA, Martinez Del Castillo E, Menzel A, Motta R, Muffler-Weigel L, Nola P, Panayatov M, Petritan AM, Petritan IC, Popa I, Roibu CC, Rubio-Cuadrado Á, Rydval M, Scharnweber T, Camarero JJ, Svoboda M, Toromani E, Trotsiuk V, van der Maaten-Theunissen M, van der Maaten E, Weigel R, Wilmking M, Zlatanov T, Rammig A, and Zang CS
- Subjects
- Forests, Trees growth & development, Trees physiology, Fagus growth & development, Fagus physiology, Climate Change, Droughts
- Abstract
The future performance of the widely abundant European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) across its ecological amplitude is uncertain. Although beech is considered drought-sensitive and thus negatively affected by drought events, scientific evidence indicating increasing drought vulnerability under climate change on a cross-regional scale remains elusive. While evaluating changes in climate sensitivity of secondary growth offers a promising avenue, studies from productive, closed-canopy forests suffer from knowledge gaps, especially regarding the natural variability of climate sensitivity and how it relates to radial growth as an indicator of tree vitality. Since beech is sensitive to drought, we in this study use a drought index as a climate variable to account for the combined effects of temperature and water availability and explore how the drought sensitivity of secondary growth varies temporally in dependence on growth variability, growth trends, and climatic water availability across the species' ecological amplitude. Our results show that drought sensitivity is highly variable and non-stationary, though consistently higher at dry sites compared to moist sites. Increasing drought sensitivity can largely be explained by increasing climatic aridity, especially as it is exacerbated by climate change and trees' rank progression within forest communities, as (co-)dominant trees are more sensitive to extra-canopy climatic conditions than trees embedded in understories. However, during the driest periods of the 20th century, growth showed clear signs of being decoupled from climate. This may indicate fundamental changes in system behavior and be early-warning signals of decreasing drought tolerance. The multiple significant interaction terms in our model elucidate the complexity of European beech's drought sensitivity, which needs to be taken into consideration when assessing this species' response to climate change., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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30. Partial asynchrony of coniferous forest carbon sources and sinks at the intra-annual time scale.
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Silvestro R, Mencuccini M, García-Valdés R, Antonucci S, Arzac A, Biondi F, Buttò V, Camarero JJ, Campelo F, Cochard H, Čufar K, Cuny HE, de Luis M, Deslauriers A, Drolet G, Fonti MV, Fonti P, Giovannelli A, Gričar J, Gruber A, Gryc V, Guerrieri R, Güney A, Guo X, Huang JG, Jyske T, Kašpar J, Kirdyanov AV, Klein T, Lemay A, Li X, Liang E, Lintunen A, Liu F, Lombardi F, Ma Q, Mäkinen H, Malik RA, Martinez Del Castillo E, Martinez-Vilalta J, Mayr S, Morin H, Nabais C, Nöjd P, Oberhuber W, Olano JM, Ouimette AP, Paljakka TVS, Peltoniemi M, Peters RL, Ren P, Prislan P, Rathgeber CBK, Sala A, Saracino A, Saulino L, Schiestl-Aalto P, Shishov VV, Stokes A, Sukumar R, Sylvain JD, Tognetti R, Treml V, Urban J, Vavrčík H, Vieira J, von Arx G, Wang Y, Yang B, Zeng Q, Zhang S, Ziaco E, and Rossi S
- Subjects
- Biomass, Ecosystem, Carbon Cycle, Trees metabolism, Forests, Seasons, Carbon Sequestration, Carbon metabolism, Wood metabolism, Wood chemistry, Tracheophyta metabolism, Climate Change
- Abstract
As major terrestrial carbon sinks, forests play an important role in mitigating climate change. The relationship between the seasonal uptake of carbon and its allocation to woody biomass remains poorly understood, leaving a significant gap in our capacity to predict carbon sequestration by forests. Here, we compare the intra-annual dynamics of carbon fluxes and wood formation across the Northern hemisphere, from carbon assimilation and the formation of non-structural carbon compounds to their incorporation in woody tissues. We show temporally coupled seasonal peaks of carbon assimilation (GPP) and wood cell differentiation, while the two processes are substantially decoupled during off-peak periods. Peaks of cambial activity occur substantially earlier compared to GPP, suggesting the buffer role of non-structural carbohydrates between the processes of carbon assimilation and allocation to wood. Our findings suggest that high-resolution seasonal data of ecosystem carbon fluxes, wood formation and the associated physiological processes may reduce uncertainties in carbon source-sink relationships at different spatial scales, from stand to ecosystem levels., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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31. Temporal and spatial variability of phloem structure in Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica and its link to climate.
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Gričar J, Jevšenak J, Giagli K, Eler K, Tsalagkas D, Gryc V, Vavrčík H, Čufar K, and Prislan P
- Subjects
- Phloem, Climate, Trees physiology, Picea physiology, Abies, Fagus, Pinus
- Abstract
Using a unique 8-year data set (2010-2017) of phloem data, we studied the effect of temperature and precipitation on the phloem anatomy (conduit area, widths of ring, early and late phloem) and xylem-ring width in two coexisting temperate tree species, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica, from three contrasting European temperate forest sites. Histometric analyses were performed on microcores taken from tree stems in autumn. We found high interannual variability and sensitivity of phloem anatomy and xylem-ring widths to precipitation and temperature; however, the responses were species- and site-specific. The contrasting response of xylem and phloem-ring widths of the same tree species to weather conditions was found at the two Slovenian sites generally well supplied with precipitation, while at the driest Czech site, the influence of weather factors on xylem and phloem ring widths was synchronised. Since widths of mean annual xylem and phloem increments were narrowest at the Czech site, this site is suggested to be most restrictive for the radial growth of both species. By influencing the seasonal patterns of xylem and phloem development, water availability appears to be the most important determinant of tissue- and species-specific responses to local weather conditions., (© 2024 The Authors. Plant, Cell & Environment published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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32. High preseason temperature variability drives convergence of xylem phenology in the Northern Hemisphere conifers.
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Zhang Y, Huang JG, Wang M, Wang W, Deslauriers A, Fonti P, Liang E, Mäkinen H, Oberhuber W, Rathgeber CBK, Tognetti R, Treml V, Yang B, Zhai L, Antonucci S, Buttò V, Camarero JJ, Campelo F, Čufar K, De Luis M, Fajstavr M, Giovannelli A, Gričar J, Gruber A, Gryc V, Güney A, Jyske T, Kašpar J, King G, Krause C, Lemay A, Lombardi F, Del Castillo EM, Morin H, Nabais C, Nöjd P, Peters RL, Prislan P, Saracino A, Shishov VV, Swidrak I, Vavrčík H, Vieira J, Zeng Q, and Rossi S
- Subjects
- Temperature, Ecosystem, Climate Change, Xylem, Seasons, Trees, Tracheophyta
- Abstract
Wood growth is key to understanding the feedback of forest ecosystems to the ongoing climate warming. An increase in spatial synchrony (i.e., coincident changes in distant populations) of spring phenology is one of the most prominent climate responses of forest trees. However, whether temperature variability contributes to an increase in the spatial synchrony of spring phenology and its underlying mechanisms remains largely unknown. Here, we analyzed an extensive dataset of xylem phenology observations of 20 conifer species from 75 sites over the Northern Hemisphere. Along the gradient of increase in temperature variability in the 75 sites, we observed a convergence in the onset of cell enlargement roughly toward the 5
th of June, with a convergence in the onset of cell wall thickening toward the summer solstice. The increase in rainfall since the 5th of June is favorable for cell division and expansion, and as the most hours of sunlight are received around the summer solstice, it allows the optimization of carbon assimilation for cell wall thickening. Hence, the convergences can be considered as the result of matching xylem phenological activities to favorable conditions in regions with high temperature variability. Yet, forest trees relying on such consistent seasonal cues for xylem growth could constrain their ability to respond to climate warming, with consequences for the potential growing season length and, ultimately, forest productivity and survival in the future., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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33. Incorporating high-resolution climate, remote sensing and topographic data to map annual forest growth in central and eastern Europe.
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Jevšenak J, Klisz M, Mašek J, Čada V, Janda P, Svoboda M, Vostarek O, Treml V, van der Maaten E, Popa A, Popa I, van der Maaten-Theunissen M, Zlatanov T, Scharnweber T, Ahlgrimm S, Stolz J, Sochová I, Roibu CC, Pretzsch H, Schmied G, Uhl E, Kaczka R, Wrzesiński P, Šenfeldr M, Jakubowski M, Tumajer J, Wilmking M, Obojes N, Rybníček M, Lévesque M, Potapov A, Basu S, Stojanović M, Stjepanović S, Vitas A, Arnič D, Metslaid S, Neycken A, Prislan P, Hartl C, Ziche D, Horáček P, Krejza J, Mikhailov S, Světlík J, Kalisty A, Kolář T, Lavnyy V, Hordo M, Oberhuber W, Levanič T, Mészáros I, Schneider L, Lehejček J, Shetti R, Bošeľa M, Copini P, Koprowski M, Sass-Klaassen U, Izmir ŞC, Bakys R, Entner H, Esper J, Janecka K, Martinez Del Castillo E, Verbylaite R, Árvai M, de Sauvage JC, Čufar K, Finner M, Hilmers T, Kern Z, Novak K, Ponjarac R, Puchałka R, Schuldt B, Škrk Dolar N, Tanovski V, Zang C, Žmegač A, Kuithan C, Metslaid M, Thurm E, Hafner P, Krajnc L, Bernabei M, Bojić S, Brus R, Burger A, D'Andrea E, Đorem T, Gławęda M, Gričar J, Gutalj M, Horváth E, Kostić S, Matović B, Merela M, Miletić B, Morgós A, Paluch R, Pilch K, Rezaie N, Rieder J, Schwab N, Sewerniak P, Stojanović D, Ullmann T, Waszak N, Zin E, Skudnik M, Oštir K, Rammig A, and Buras A
- Subjects
- Forests, Trees, Climate Change, Europe, Eastern, Europe, Ecosystem, Remote Sensing Technology
- Abstract
To enhance our understanding of forest carbon sequestration, climate change mitigation and drought impact on forest ecosystems, the availability of high-resolution annual forest growth maps based on tree-ring width (TRW) would provide a significant advancement to the field. Site-specific characteristics, which can be approximated by high-resolution Earth observation by satellites (EOS), emerge as crucial drivers of forest growth, influencing how climate translates into tree growth. EOS provides information on surface reflectance related to forest characteristics and thus can potentially improve the accuracy of forest growth models based on TRW. Through the modelling of TRW using EOS, climate and topography data, we showed that species-specific models can explain up to 52 % of model variance (Quercus petraea), while combining different species results in relatively poor model performance (R
2 = 13 %). The integration of EOS into models based solely on climate and elevation data improved the explained variance by 6 % on average. Leveraging these insights, we successfully generated a map of annual TRW for the year 2021. We employed the area of applicability (AOA) approach to delineate the range in which our models are deemed valid. The calculated AOA for the established forest-type models was 73 % of the study region, indicating robust spatial applicability. Notably, unreliable predictions predominantly occurred in the climate margins of our dataset. In conclusion, our large-scale assessment underscores the efficacy of combining climate, EOS and topographic data to develop robust models for mapping annual TRW. This research not only fills a critical void in the current understanding of forest growth dynamics but also highlights the potential of integrated data sources for comprehensive ecosystem assessments., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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34. A critical thermal transition driving spring phenology of Northern Hemisphere conifers.
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Huang JG, Zhang Y, Wang M, Yu X, Deslauriers A, Fonti P, Liang E, Mäkinen H, Oberhuber W, Rathgeber CBK, Tognetti R, Treml V, Yang B, Zhai L, Zhang JL, Antonucci S, Bergeron Y, Camarero JJ, Campelo F, Čufar K, Cuny HE, De Luis M, Fajstavr M, Giovannelli A, Gričar J, Gruber A, Gryc V, Güney A, Jyske T, Kašpar J, King G, Krause C, Lemay A, Liu F, Lombardi F, Del Castillo EM, Morin H, Nabais C, Nöjd P, Peters RL, Prislan P, Saracino A, Shishov VV, Swidrak I, Vavrčík H, Vieira J, Zeng Q, Liu Y, and Rossi S
- Subjects
- Bayes Theorem, Forests, Cold Temperature, Temperature, Climate Change, Seasons, Tracheophyta
- Abstract
Despite growing interest in predicting plant phenological shifts, advanced spring phenology by global climate change remains debated. Evidence documenting either small or large advancement of spring phenology to rising temperature over the spatio-temporal scales implies a potential existence of a thermal threshold in the responses of forests to global warming. We collected a unique data set of xylem cell-wall-thickening onset dates in 20 coniferous species covering a broad mean annual temperature (MAT) gradient (-3.05 to 22.9°C) across the Northern Hemisphere (latitudes 23°-66° N). Along the MAT gradient, we identified a threshold temperature (using segmented regression) of 4.9 ± 1.1°C, above which the response of xylem phenology to rising temperatures significantly decline. This threshold separates the Northern Hemisphere conifers into cold and warm thermal niches, with MAT and spring forcing being the primary drivers for the onset dates (estimated by linear and Bayesian mixed-effect models), respectively. The identified thermal threshold should be integrated into the Earth-System-Models for a better understanding of spring phenology in response to global warming and an improved prediction of global climate-carbon feedbacks., (© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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35. Evidence of Woodland Management at the Eneolithic Pile Dwellings (3700-2400 BCE) in the Ljubljansko Barje, Slovenia?
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Out WA, Hänninen K, Merela M, Velušček A, Vermeeren C, and Čufar K
- Abstract
It is assumed that people practiced woodland management, i.e., coppicing and pollarding, in prehistory, but details are poorly known. This study aims for a better understanding of woodland exploitation through time in the wetland basin of the Ljubljansko barje, Slovenia, from 3700-2400 BCE (Before Common Era). To do so, uncarbonized, waterlogged wood from 16 Eneolithic pile dwellings situated in two geographical clusters that cover a time span of c. 1300 years were subjected to age/diameter analysis. It is the first time that age/diameter analysis has been applied to multiple sites from the same region. The investigated posts represent a wide range of taxa, but oak ( Quercus sp.) and ash ( Fraxinus sp.) represent 75% of the total, indicating selective use of wood for this purpose. Diameter selection of ash may have taken place as well. At both site clusters, the age/diameter data do not reveal any unequivocal evidence for woodland management. Only at the youngest sites do the data possibly show some gradually changing practices. The outcomes are discussed within the framework of recent discussions about woodland management in Europe.
- Published
- 2023
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36. Dendrochronological Dating and Provenancing of String Instruments.
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Čufar K, Demšar B, Beuting M, Balzano A, Škrk N, Krže L, and Merela M
- Subjects
- Wood, Norway, Abies, Picea
- Abstract
Dendrochronology, the science of dating tree rings in the wood, defines in which calendar year a particular tree ring was formed. The method can be used to determine the age and authentication of wooden musical instruments. We present a protocol describing how to perform a dendrochronological analysis on stringed instruments and how to interpret the dating. The protocol describes the basic steps in the analysis of top plates, which are usually made of Norway spruce (Picea abies) or, more rarely, silver fir (Abies alba). First, the top plate is carefully inspected, and then the tree ring widths are measured directly on the instrument using high-resolution images. After completing the measurements, a tree ring sequence of the instrument is created, and, in the next step, dating is performed with a number of reference chronologies of the tree species from different geographical areas and instruments. The specialists who date the instruments also invest work in creating reference chronologies. The dendrochronological report provides the dating of an instrument as a calendar year (end date), indicating the year in which the last (most recent) tree ring on the top plate was formed when the tree was still alive. The end date represents the terminus post quem, the year after which the instrument was made or before which it could not have been made. To estimate the year of manufacture, one must consider the time required for wood drying and storing and the number of tree rings removed during wood processing. This protocol is intended to help those commissioning such an analysis to better understand how the analysis is performed and how to interpret the dendrochronological reports in terms of the age, origin, maker, and authenticity of the instrument.
- Published
- 2022
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37. Dominance of Fagus sylvatica in the Growing Stock and Its Relationship to Climate-An Analysis Using Modeled Stand-Level Climate Data.
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Škrk N, Serrano-Notivoli R, de Luis M, and Čufar K
- Abstract
In the future, climate change is expected to affect the spatial distribution of most tree species in Europe. The European beech ( Fagus sylvatica ), a drought-sensitive tree species, is currently distributed throughout Europe, where it is an ecologically and economically important species. In Slovenia, the European beech represents 33% of the growing stock, but such a proportion greatly varies across Europe. Whether such a variation is related to the climate environmental gradients or because of historical or management decisions is an as-yet unexplored question. For this study, we employed the Slovenian Forests Service inventory, where the proportion of beech in the forest stock has been monitored in 341,341 forest stands across the country. Modeled climate data from the SLOCLIM database, calculated for each of the stands, was also used to test the hypothesis that although beech forests have always been influenced by human activity, the dominance of beech trees in forest stands is at least partially dictated by the climate. The results showed the distribution of the main climate variables (annual precipitation, the share of summer and spring precipitation, and annual maximum and minimum temperatures) and how they affect the current dominance of beech trees at the stand level. Due to the large number and variability of forest stands studied, the results should be transferable to better understand and manage the climatic suitability and risks of Fagus sylvatica . The modeled data is publicly available in the web repository Zenodo.
- Published
- 2022
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38. Climate-change-driven growth decline of European beech forests.
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Martinez Del Castillo E, Zang CS, Buras A, Hacket-Pain A, Esper J, Serrano-Notivoli R, Hartl C, Weigel R, Klesse S, Resco de Dios V, Scharnweber T, Dorado-Liñán I, van der Maaten-Theunissen M, van der Maaten E, Jump A, Mikac S, Banzragch BE, Beck W, Cavin L, Claessens H, Čada V, Čufar K, Dulamsuren C, Gričar J, Gil-Pelegrín E, Janda P, Kazimirovic M, Kreyling J, Latte N, Leuschner C, Longares LA, Menzel A, Merela M, Motta R, Muffler L, Nola P, Petritan AM, Petritan IC, Prislan P, Rubio-Cuadrado Á, Rydval M, Stajić B, Svoboda M, Toromani E, Trotsiuk V, Wilmking M, Zlatanov T, and de Luis M
- Subjects
- Climate Change, Droughts, Forests, Trees, Fagus
- Abstract
The growth of past, present, and future forests was, is and will be affected by climate variability. This multifaceted relationship has been assessed in several regional studies, but spatially resolved, large-scale analyses are largely missing so far. Here we estimate recent changes in growth of 5800 beech trees (Fagus sylvatica L.) from 324 sites, representing the full geographic and climatic range of species. Future growth trends were predicted considering state-of-the-art climate scenarios. The validated models indicate growth declines across large region of the distribution in recent decades, and project severe future growth declines ranging from -20% to more than -50% by 2090, depending on the region and climate change scenario (i.e. CMIP6 SSP1-2.6 and SSP5-8.5). Forecasted forest productivity losses are most striking towards the southern distribution limit of Fagus sylvatica, in regions where persisting atmospheric high-pressure systems are expected to increase drought severity. The projected 21
st century growth changes across Europe indicate serious ecological and economic consequences that require immediate forest adaptation., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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39. Reply to Elmendorf and Ettinger: Photoperiod plays a dominant and irreplaceable role in triggering secondary growth resumption.
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Huang JG, Campelo F, Ma Q, Zhang Y, Bergeron Y, Deslauriers A, Fonti P, Liang E, Mäkinen H, Oberhuber W, Rathgeber CBK, Tognetti R, Treml V, Yang B, Zhai L, Zhang JL, Antonucci S, Camarero JJ, Čufar K, Cuny HE, De Luis M, Giovannelli A, Gričar J, Gruber A, Gryc V, Güney A, Guo X, Huang W, Jyske T, Kašpar J, King G, Krause C, Lemay A, Liu F, Lombardi F, Del Castillo EM, Morin H, Nabais C, Nöjd P, Peters RL, Prislan P, Saracino A, Swidrak I, Vavrčík H, Vieira J, Yu B, Zhang S, Zeng Q, Ziaco E, and Rossi S
- Published
- 2020
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40. Photoperiod and temperature as dominant environmental drivers triggering secondary growth resumption in Northern Hemisphere conifers.
- Author
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Huang JG, Ma Q, Rossi S, Biondi F, Deslauriers A, Fonti P, Liang E, Mäkinen H, Oberhuber W, Rathgeber CBK, Tognetti R, Treml V, Yang B, Zhang JL, Antonucci S, Bergeron Y, Camarero JJ, Campelo F, Čufar K, Cuny HE, De Luis M, Giovannelli A, Gričar J, Gruber A, Gryc V, Güney A, Guo X, Huang W, Jyske T, Kašpar J, King G, Krause C, Lemay A, Liu F, Lombardi F, Martinez Del Castillo E, Morin H, Nabais C, Nöjd P, Peters RL, Prislan P, Saracino A, Swidrak I, Vavrčík H, Vieira J, Yu B, Zhang S, Zeng Q, Zhang Y, and Ziaco E
- Subjects
- Climate, Climate Change, Ecosystem, Forests, Global Warming, Models, Biological, Photoperiod, Seasons, Temperature, Tracheophyta genetics, Trees growth & development, Tracheophyta growth & development, Wood growth & development, Xylem growth & development
- Abstract
Wood formation consumes around 15% of the anthropogenic CO
2 emissions per year and plays a critical role in long-term sequestration of carbon on Earth. However, the exogenous factors driving wood formation onset and the underlying cellular mechanisms are still poorly understood and quantified, and this hampers an effective assessment of terrestrial forest productivity and carbon budget under global warming. Here, we used an extensive collection of unique datasets of weekly xylem tissue formation (wood formation) from 21 coniferous species across the Northern Hemisphere (latitudes 23 to 67°N) to present a quantitative demonstration that the onset of wood formation in Northern Hemisphere conifers is primarily driven by photoperiod and mean annual temperature (MAT), and only secondarily by spring forcing, winter chilling, and moisture availability. Photoperiod interacts with MAT and plays the dominant role in regulating the onset of secondary meristem growth, contrary to its as-yet-unquantified role in affecting the springtime phenology of primary meristems. The unique relationships between exogenous factors and wood formation could help to predict how forest ecosystems respond and adapt to climate warming and could provide a better understanding of the feedback occurring between vegetation and climate that is mediated by phenology. Our study quantifies the role of major environmental drivers for incorporation into state-of-the-art Earth system models (ESMs), thereby providing an improved assessment of long-term and high-resolution observations of biogeochemical cycles across terrestrial biomes., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interest., (Copyright © 2020 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.)- Published
- 2020
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41. Low growth resilience to drought is related to future mortality risk in trees.
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DeSoto L, Cailleret M, Sterck F, Jansen S, Kramer K, Robert EMR, Aakala T, Amoroso MM, Bigler C, Camarero JJ, Čufar K, Gea-Izquierdo G, Gillner S, Haavik LJ, Hereş AM, Kane JM, Kharuk VI, Kitzberger T, Klein T, Levanič T, Linares JC, Mäkinen H, Oberhuber W, Papadopoulos A, Rohner B, Sangüesa-Barreda G, Stojanovic DB, Suárez ML, Villalba R, and Martínez-Vilalta J
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological, Climate Change, Cycadopsida growth & development, Ecology, Forests, Magnoliopsida growth & development, Mortality, Soil chemistry, Species Specificity, Stress, Physiological, Survival Analysis, Trees classification, Water, Droughts, Trees growth & development
- Abstract
Severe droughts have the potential to reduce forest productivity and trigger tree mortality. Most trees face several drought events during their life and therefore resilience to dry conditions may be crucial to long-term survival. We assessed how growth resilience to severe droughts, including its components resistance and recovery, is related to the ability to survive future droughts by using a tree-ring database of surviving and now-dead trees from 118 sites (22 species, >3,500 trees). We found that, across the variety of regions and species sampled, trees that died during water shortages were less resilient to previous non-lethal droughts, relative to coexisting surviving trees of the same species. In angiosperms, drought-related mortality risk is associated with lower resistance (low capacity to reduce impact of the initial drought), while it is related to reduced recovery (low capacity to attain pre-drought growth rates) in gymnosperms. The different resilience strategies in these two taxonomic groups open new avenues to improve our understanding and prediction of drought-induced mortality.
- Published
- 2020
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42. Testing three climate datasets for dendroclimatological studies of oaks in the South Carpathians.
- Author
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Nechita C, Čufar K, Macovei I, Popa I, and Badea ON
- Subjects
- Droughts, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring, Romania, Temperature, Climate, Climate Change, Quercus
- Abstract
Three gridded datasets containing interpolated daily and monthly precipitation and temperature values over the past five decades were tested against four tree-ring chronologies of oak (Quercus robur and Q. petraea). The objective of this research was to investigate the climate-growth relationship and whether the Pearson's product-moment correlation coefficients differ significantly if mean monthly precipitation and temperature data from the different climate databases, CRU, E-OBS and ROCADA are used. To this end, we selected two representative oak ecosystems in the South Carpathians, Romania, and analysed earlywood, latewood and tree-ring widths. Climate time series trends for the South Carpathians coldest, warmest days and wettest days were assessed with datasets from E-OBS and ROCADA, which differed in the density of their meteorological station network and their interpolation methods. The observed climatic parameters showed changes towards wetter conditions after the mid-1980s. For 1961-2013, E-OBS underestimated the mean daily temperature and daily precipitation compared with ROCADA. The results showed that higher extreme temperatures from January-March affected earlywood growth. In the investigated study region, latewood formation seemed to be affected by water availability mainly in May. Periods of drought associated with higher temperatures have limiting effects on tree growth, but these events are captured in different ways by each climate database analysed. Similarly, the results showed the discrepancy among datasets for earlywood and climate relationships. The results emphasize the importance of proper selection of climate data for assessing climate-tree growth relationships. For future dendroclimatological and dendroecological studies of oak in Romania, we recommend the ROCADA database, while E-OBS is recommended if an up-to-date climate dataset is needed., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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43. Chilling and forcing temperatures interact to predict the onset of wood formation in Northern Hemisphere conifers.
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Delpierre N, Lireux S, Hartig F, Camarero JJ, Cheaib A, Čufar K, Cuny H, Deslauriers A, Fonti P, Gričar J, Huang JG, Krause C, Liu G, de Luis M, Mäkinen H, Del Castillo EM, Morin H, Nöjd P, Oberhuber W, Prislan P, Rossi S, Saderi SM, Treml V, Vavrick H, and Rathgeber CBK
- Subjects
- Bayes Theorem, Canada, Climate Change, Europe, Seasons, Xylem growth & development, Models, Biological, Temperature, Tracheophyta growth & development, Wood growth & development
- Abstract
The phenology of wood formation is a critical process to consider for predicting how trees from the temperate and boreal zones may react to climate change. Compared to leaf phenology, however, the determinism of wood phenology is still poorly known. Here, we compared for the first time three alternative ecophysiological model classes (threshold models, heat-sum models and chilling-influenced heat-sum models) and an empirical model in their ability to predict the starting date of xylem cell enlargement in spring, for four major Northern Hemisphere conifers (Larix decidua, Pinus sylvestris, Picea abies and Picea mariana). We fitted models with Bayesian inference to wood phenological data collected for 220 site-years over Europe and Canada. The chilling-influenced heat-sum model received most support for all the four studied species, predicting validation data with a 7.7-day error, which is within one day of the observed data resolution. We conclude that both chilling and forcing temperatures determine the onset of wood formation in Northern Hemisphere conifers. Importantly, the chilling-influenced heat-sum model showed virtually no spatial bias whichever the species, despite the large environmental gradients considered. This suggests that the spring onset of wood formation is far less affected by local adaptation than by environmentally driven plasticity. In a context of climate change, we therefore expect rising winter-spring temperature to exert ambivalent effects on the spring onset of wood formation, tending to hasten it through the accumulation of forcing temperature, but imposing a higher forcing temperature requirement through the lower accumulation of chilling., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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44. Early-Warning Signals of Individual Tree Mortality Based on Annual Radial Growth.
- Author
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Cailleret M, Dakos V, Jansen S, Robert EMR, Aakala T, Amoroso MM, Antos JA, Bigler C, Bugmann H, Caccianaga M, Camarero JJ, Cherubini P, Coyea MR, Čufar K, Das AJ, Davi H, Gea-Izquierdo G, Gillner S, Haavik LJ, Hartmann H, Hereş AM, Hultine KR, Janda P, Kane JM, Kharuk VI, Kitzberger T, Klein T, Levanic T, Linares JC, Lombardi F, Mäkinen H, Mészáros I, Metsaranta JM, Oberhuber W, Papadopoulos A, Petritan AM, Rohner B, Sangüesa-Barreda G, Smith JM, Stan AB, Stojanovic DB, Suarez ML, Svoboda M, Trotsiuk V, Villalba R, Westwood AR, Wyckoff PH, and Martínez-Vilalta J
- Abstract
Tree mortality is a key driver of forest dynamics and its occurrence is projected to increase in the future due to climate change. Despite recent advances in our understanding of the physiological mechanisms leading to death, we still lack robust indicators of mortality risk that could be applied at the individual tree scale. Here, we build on a previous contribution exploring the differences in growth level between trees that died and survived a given mortality event to assess whether changes in temporal autocorrelation, variance, and synchrony in time-series of annual radial growth data can be used as early warning signals of mortality risk. Taking advantage of a unique global ring-width database of 3065 dead trees and 4389 living trees growing together at 198 sites (belonging to 36 gymnosperm and angiosperm species), we analyzed temporal changes in autocorrelation, variance, and synchrony before tree death (diachronic analysis), and also compared these metrics between trees that died and trees that survived a given mortality event (synchronic analysis). Changes in autocorrelation were a poor indicator of mortality risk. However, we found a gradual increase in inter-annual growth variability and a decrease in growth synchrony in the last ∼20 years before mortality of gymnosperms, irrespective of the cause of mortality. These changes could be associated with drought-induced alterations in carbon economy and allocation patterns. In angiosperms, we did not find any consistent changes in any metric. Such lack of any signal might be explained by the relatively high capacity of angiosperms to recover after a stress-induced growth decline. Our analysis provides a robust method for estimating early-warning signals of tree mortality based on annual growth data. In addition to the frequently reported decrease in growth rates, an increase in inter-annual growth variability and a decrease in growth synchrony may be powerful predictors of gymnosperm mortality risk, but not necessarily so for angiosperms.
- Published
- 2019
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45. High-Throughput DNA sequencing of ancient wood.
- Author
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Wagner S, Lagane F, Seguin-Orlando A, Schubert M, Leroy T, Guichoux E, Chancerel E, Bech-Hebelstrup I, Bernard V, Billard C, Billaud Y, Bolliger M, Croutsch C, Čufar K, Eynaud F, Heussner KU, Köninger J, Langenegger F, Leroy F, Lima C, Martinelli N, Momber G, Billamboz A, Nelle O, Palomo A, Piqué R, Ramstein M, Schweichel R, Stäuble H, Tegel W, Terradas X, Verdin F, Plomion C, Kremer A, and Orlando L
- Subjects
- Biodiversity, Biological Evolution, Climate Change, Forests, Quercus genetics, DNA, Ancient chemistry, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Wood
- Abstract
Reconstructing the colonization and demographic dynamics that gave rise to extant forests is essential to forecasts of forest responses to environmental changes. Classical approaches to map how population of trees changed through space and time largely rely on pollen distribution patterns, with only a limited number of studies exploiting DNA molecules preserved in wooden tree archaeological and subfossil remains. Here, we advance such analyses by applying high-throughput (HTS) DNA sequencing to wood archaeological and subfossil material for the first time, using a comprehensive sample of 167 European white oak waterlogged remains spanning a large temporal (from 550 to 9,800 years) and geographical range across Europe. The successful characterization of the endogenous DNA and exogenous microbial DNA of 140 (~83%) samples helped the identification of environmental conditions favouring long-term DNA preservation in wood remains, and started to unveil the first trends in the DNA decay process in wood material. Additionally, the maternally inherited chloroplast haplotypes of 21 samples from three periods of forest human-induced use (Neolithic, Bronze Age and Middle Ages) were found to be consistent with those of modern populations growing in the same geographic areas. Our work paves the way for further studies aiming at using ancient DNA preserved in wood to reconstruct the micro-evolutionary response of trees to climate change and human forest management., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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46. Critical minimum temperature limits xylogenesis and maintains treelines on the southeastern Tibetan Plateau.
- Author
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Li X, Liang E, Gričar J, Rossi S, Čufar K, and Ellison AM
- Abstract
Physiological and ecological mechanisms that define treelines are still debated. It has been suggested that the absence of trees above the treeline is caused by low temperatures that limit growth. Thus, we hypothesized that there is a critical minimum temperature (CT
min ) preventing xylogenesis at treeline. We tested this hypothesis by examining weekly xylogenesis across three and four growing seasons in two natural Smith fir (Abies georgei var. smithii) treeline sites on the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. Despite differences in the timing of cell differentiation among years, minimum air temperature was the dominant climatic variable associated with xylem growth; the critical minimum temperature (CTmin ) for the onset and end of xylogenesis occurred at 0.7±0.4°C. A process-based modelling chronology of tree-ring formation using this CTmin was consistent with actual tree-ring data. This extremely low CTmin permits Smith fir growing at treeline to complete annual xylem production and maturation and provides both support and a mechanism for treeline formation., (Copyright © 2017 Science China Press. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
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47. A synthesis of radial growth patterns preceding tree mortality.
- Author
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Cailleret M, Jansen S, Robert EM, Desoto L, Aakala T, Antos JA, Beikircher B, Bigler C, Bugmann H, Caccianiga M, Čada V, Camarero JJ, Cherubini P, Cochard H, Coyea MR, Čufar K, Das AJ, Davi H, Delzon S, Dorman M, Gea-Izquierdo G, Gillner S, Haavik LJ, Hartmann H, Hereş AM, Hultine KR, Janda P, Kane JM, Kharuk VI, Kitzberger T, Klein T, Kramer K, Lens F, Levanic T, Linares Calderon JC, Lloret F, Lobo-Do-Vale R, Lombardi F, López Rodríguez R, Mäkinen H, Mayr S, Mészáros I, Metsaranta JM, Minunno F, Oberhuber W, Papadopoulos A, Peltoniemi M, Petritan AM, Rohner B, Sangüesa-Barreda G, Sarris D, Smith JM, Stan AB, Sterck F, Stojanović DB, Suarez ML, Svoboda M, Tognetti R, Torres-Ruiz JM, Trotsiuk V, Villalba R, Vodde F, Westwood AR, Wyckoff PH, Zafirov N, and Martínez-Vilalta J
- Subjects
- Animals, Carbon, Stress, Physiological, Coleoptera, Droughts, Trees growth & development
- Abstract
Tree mortality is a key factor influencing forest functions and dynamics, but our understanding of the mechanisms leading to mortality and the associated changes in tree growth rates are still limited. We compiled a new pan-continental tree-ring width database from sites where both dead and living trees were sampled (2970 dead and 4224 living trees from 190 sites, including 36 species), and compared early and recent growth rates between trees that died and those that survived a given mortality event. We observed a decrease in radial growth before death in ca. 84% of the mortality events. The extent and duration of these reductions were highly variable (1-100 years in 96% of events) due to the complex interactions among study species and the source(s) of mortality. Strong and long-lasting declines were found for gymnosperms, shade- and drought-tolerant species, and trees that died from competition. Angiosperms and trees that died due to biotic attacks (especially bark-beetles) typically showed relatively small and short-term growth reductions. Our analysis did not highlight any universal trade-off between early growth and tree longevity within a species, although this result may also reflect high variability in sampling design among sites. The intersite and interspecific variability in growth patterns before mortality provides valuable information on the nature of the mortality process, which is consistent with our understanding of the physiological mechanisms leading to mortality. Abrupt changes in growth immediately before death can be associated with generalized hydraulic failure and/or bark-beetle attack, while long-term decrease in growth may be associated with a gradual decline in hydraulic performance coupled with depletion in carbon reserves. Our results imply that growth-based mortality algorithms may be a powerful tool for predicting gymnosperm mortality induced by chronic stress, but not necessarily so for angiosperms and in case of intense drought or bark-beetle outbreaks., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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48. Annual Cambial Rhythm in Pinus halepensis and Pinus sylvestris as Indicator for Climate Adaptation.
- Author
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Prislan P, Gričar J, de Luis M, Novak K, Martinez Del Castillo E, Schmitt U, Koch G, Štrus J, Mrak P, Žnidarič MT, and Čufar K
- Abstract
To understand better the adaptation strategies of intra-annual radial growth in Pinus halepensis and Pinus sylvestris to local environmental conditions, we examined the seasonal rhythm of cambial activity and cell differentiation at tissue and cellular levels. Two contrasting sites differing in temperature and amount of precipitation were selected for each species, one typical for their growth and the other represented border climatic conditions, where the two species coexisted. Mature P. halepensis trees from Mediterranean (Spain) and sub-Mediterranean (Slovenia) sites, and P. sylvestris from sub-Mediterranean (Slovenia) and temperate (Slovenia) sites were selected. Repeated sampling was performed throughout the year and samples were prepared for examination with light and transmission electron microscopes. We hypothesized that cambial rhythm in trees growing at the sub-Mediterranean site where the two species co-exist will be similar as at typical sites for their growth. Cambium in P. halepensis at the Mediterranean site was active throughout the year and was never truly dormant, whereas at the sub-Mediterranean site it appeared to be dormant during the winter months. In contrast, cambium in P. sylvestris was clearly dormant at both sub-Mediterranean and temperate sites, although the dormant period seemed to be significantly longer at the temperate site. Thus, the hypothesis was only partly confirmed. Different cambial and cell differentiation rhythms of the two species at the site where both species co-exist and typical sites for their growth indicate their high but different adaptation strategies in terms of adjustment of radial growth to environmental heterogeneity, crucial for long-term tree performance and survival.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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49. Pattern of xylem phenology in conifers of cold ecosystems at the Northern Hemisphere.
- Author
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Rossi S, Anfodillo T, Čufar K, Cuny HE, Deslauriers A, Fonti P, Frank D, Gričar J, Gruber A, Huang JG, Jyske T, Kašpar J, King G, Krause C, Liang E, Mäkinen H, Morin H, Nöjd P, Oberhuber W, Prislan P, Rathgeber CB, Saracino A, Swidrak I, and Treml V
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Plant Development, Seasons, Trees, Cold Temperature, Tracheophyta, Xylem
- Abstract
The interaction between xylem phenology and climate assesses forest growth and productivity and carbon storage across biomes under changing environmental conditions. We tested the hypothesis that patterns of wood formation are maintained unaltered despite the temperature changes across cold ecosystems. Wood microcores were collected weekly or biweekly throughout the growing season for periods varying between 1 and 13 years during 1998-2014 and cut in transverse sections for assessing the onset and ending of the phases of xylem differentiation. The data set represented 1321 trees belonging to 10 conifer species from 39 sites in the Northern Hemisphere and covering an interval of mean annual temperature exceeding 14 K. The phenological events and mean annual temperature of the sites were related linearly, with spring and autumnal events being separated by constant intervals across the range of temperature analysed. At increasing temperature, first enlarging, wall-thickening and mature tracheids appeared earlier, and last enlarging and wall-thickening tracheids occurred later. Overall, the period of wood formation lengthened linearly with the mean annual temperature, from 83.7 days at -2 °C to 178.1 days at 12 °C, at a rate of 6.5 days °C
-1 . April-May temperatures produced the best models predicting the dates of wood formation. Our findings demonstrated the uniformity of the process of wood formation and the importance of the environmental conditions occurring at the time of growth resumption. Under warming scenarios, the period of wood formation might lengthen synchronously in the cold biomes of the Northern Hemisphere., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2016
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50. Quantitative Wood Anatomy-Practical Guidelines.
- Author
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von Arx G, Crivellaro A, Prendin AL, Čufar K, and Carrer M
- Abstract
Quantitative wood anatomy analyzes the variability of xylem anatomical features in trees, shrubs, and herbaceous species to address research questions related to plant functioning, growth, and environment. Among the more frequently considered anatomical features are lumen dimensions and wall thickness of conducting cells, fibers, and several ray properties. The structural properties of each xylem anatomical feature are mostly fixed once they are formed, and define to a large extent its functionality, including transport and storage of water, nutrients, sugars, and hormones, and providing mechanical support. The anatomical features can often be localized within an annual growth ring, which allows to establish intra-annual past and present structure-function relationships and its sensitivity to environmental variability. However, there are many methodological challenges to handle when aiming at producing (large) data sets of xylem anatomical data. Here we describe the different steps from wood sample collection to xylem anatomical data, provide guidance and identify pitfalls, and present different image-analysis tools for the quantification of anatomical features, in particular conducting cells. We show that each data production step from sample collection in the field, microslide preparation in the lab, image capturing through an optical microscope and image analysis with specific tools can readily introduce measurement errors between 5 and 30% and more, whereby the magnitude usually increases the smaller the anatomical features. Such measurement errors-if not avoided or corrected-may make it impossible to extract meaningful xylem anatomical data in light of the rather small range of variability in many anatomical features as observed, for example, within time series of individual plants. Following a rigid protocol and quality control as proposed in this paper is thus mandatory to use quantitative data of xylem anatomical features as a powerful source for many research topics.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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