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Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition alters growth responses of European beech (Fagus sylvativa L.) to climate change
- Source :
- Hess, C, Niemeyer, T, Fichtner, A, Jansen, K, Kunz, M, Maneke, M, von Wehrden, H, Quante, M, Walmsley, D, von Oheimb, G & Härdtle, W 2018, ' Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition alters growth responses of European beech (Fagus sylvativa L.) to climate change ', Environmental Pollution, vol. 233, pp. 92-98 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.024, Hess, C, Niemeyer, T, Fichtner, A, Jansen, K, Kunz, M, Maneke, M, von Wehrden, H, Quante, M, Walmsley, D, von Oheimb, G & Härdtle, W 2018, ' Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition alters growth responses of European beech (Fagus sylvativa L.) to climate change ' Environmental Pollution, vol 233, pp. 92-98 . DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.024
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Global change affects the functioning of forest ecosystems and the services they provide, but little is known about the interactive effects of co-occurring global change drivers on important functions such as tree growth and vitality. In the present study we quantified the interactive (i.e. synergistic or antagonistic) effects of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition and climatic variables (temperature, precipitation) on tree growth (in terms of tree-ring width, TRW), taking forest ecosystems with European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) as an example. We hypothesised that (i) N deposition and climatic variables can evoke non-additive responses of the radial increment of beech trees, and (ii) N loads have the potential to strengthen the trees' sensitivity to climate change. In young stands, we found a synergistic positive effect of N deposition and annual mean temperature on TRW, possibly linked to the alleviation of an N shortage in young stands. In mature stands, however, high N deposition significantly increased the trees’ sensitivity to increasing annual mean temperatures (antagonistic effect on TRW), possibly due to increased fine root dieback, decreasing mycorrhizal colonization or shifts in biomass allocation patterns (aboveground vs. belowground). Accordingly, N deposition and climatic variables caused both synergistic and antagonistic effects on the radial increment of beech trees, depending on tree age and stand characteristics. Hence, the nature of interactions could mediate the long-term effects of global change drivers (including N deposition) on forest carbon sequestration. In conclusion, our findings illustrate that interaction processes between climatic variables and N deposition are complex and have the potential to impair growth and performance of European beech. This in turn emphasises the importance of multiple-factor studies to foster an integrated understanding and models aiming at improved projections of tree growth responses to co-occurring drivers of global change. Global change affects the functioning of forest ecosystems and the services they provide, but little is known about the interactive effects of co-occurring global change drivers on important functions such as tree growth and vitality. In the present study we quantified the interactive (i.e. synergistic or antagonistic) effects of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition and climatic variables (temperature, precipitation) on tree growth (in terms of tree-ring width, TRW), taking forest ecosystems with European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) as an example. We hypothesised that (i) N deposition and climatic variables can evoke non-additive responses of the radial increment of beech trees, and (ii) N loads have the potential to strengthen the trees' sensitivity to climate change. In young stands, we found a synergistic positive effect of N deposition and annual mean temperature on TRW, possibly linked to the alleviation of an N shortage in young stands. In mature stands, however, high N deposition significantly increased the trees’ sensitivity to increasing annual mean temperatures (antagonistic effect on TRW), possibly due to increased fine root dieback, decreasing mycorrhizal colonization or shifts in biomass allocation patterns (aboveground vs. belowground). Accordingly, N deposition and climatic variables caused both synergistic and antagonistic effects on the radial increment of beech trees, depending on tree age and stand characteristics. Hence, the nature of interactions could mediate the long-term effects of global change drivers (including N deposition) on forest carbon sequestration. In conclusion, our findings illustrate that interaction processes between climatic variables and N deposition are complex and have the potential to impair growth and performance of European beech. This in turn emphasises the importance of multiple-factor studies to foster an integrated understanding and models aiming at improved projections of tree growth responses to co-occurring drivers of global change.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Nitrogen
Luxembourg
Climate Change
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Climate change
interaction effects
Forests
Carbon sequestration
Toxicology
Plant Roots
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Sustainability Science
Trees
Fagus sylvatica
Forest ecology
Fagus
Biomass
Beech
Global change
Biology
Ecosystem
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Environmental planning
Air Pollutants
Biomass (ecology)
biology
Ecology
Radial increment
Temperature
General Medicine
biology.organism_classification
Pollution
Ecosystems Research
Ecosystem functioning
Environmental science
Deposition (chemistry)
Environmental Monitoring
Transdisciplinary studies
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Hess, C, Niemeyer, T, Fichtner, A, Jansen, K, Kunz, M, Maneke, M, von Wehrden, H, Quante, M, Walmsley, D, von Oheimb, G & Härdtle, W 2018, ' Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition alters growth responses of European beech (Fagus sylvativa L.) to climate change ', Environmental Pollution, vol. 233, pp. 92-98 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.024, Hess, C, Niemeyer, T, Fichtner, A, Jansen, K, Kunz, M, Maneke, M, von Wehrden, H, Quante, M, Walmsley, D, von Oheimb, G & Härdtle, W 2018, ' Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition alters growth responses of European beech (Fagus sylvativa L.) to climate change ' Environmental Pollution, vol 233, pp. 92-98 . DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.024
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....330bf8fd9801fafd467571f141a0cf01
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.024