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Título
Warmer springs have increased the frequency and extension of late-frost defoliations in southern European beech forests
Año del Documento
2021
Editorial
Elsevier
Documento Fuente
Science of the Total Environment, 775.
Zusammenfassung
Climate change is increasing the frequency of extreme climate events, causing profound impacts on forest
function and composition. Late frost defoliation (LFD) events, the loss of photosynthetic tissues due to low
temperatures at the start of the growing season, might become more recurrent under future climate scenarios.
Therefore, the detection of changes in late-frost risk in response to global change emerges as a
high-priority research topic. Here, we used a tree-ring network from southern European beech (Fagus
sylvatica L.) forests comprising Spain, Italy and the Austrian Alps, to assess the incidence of LFD events in
the last seven decades. We fitted linear-mixed models of basal area increment using different LFD indicators
considering warmspring temperatures and late-spring frosts as fixed factors.We reconstructed major
LFD events since 1950, matching extreme values of LFD climatic indicators with sharp tree-ring growth reductions.
The last LFD events were validated using remote sensing. Lastly, reconstructed LFD events were
climatically and spatially characterized. Warm temperatures before the late-spring frost, defined by high
values of growing-degree days, influenced beech growth negatively, particularly in the southernmost populations.
The number of LFD events increased towards beech southern distribution edge. Spanish and the
southernmost Italian beech forests experienced higher frequency of LFD events since the 1990s. Until
then, LFD events were circumscribed to local scales, but since that decade, LFD events became widespread,
largely affecting the whole beech southwestern distribution area. Our study, based on in-situ evidence,
sheds light on the climatic factors driving LFD occurrence and illustrates how increased occurrence and
spatial extension of late-spring frosts might constrain future southern European beech forests' growth and functionality. Observed alterations in the climate-phenology interactions in response to climate change represent a potential threat for temperate deciduous forests persistence in their drier/southern distribution
edge.
Revisión por pares
SI
Patrocinador
spRING (CGL2017-87309-P; Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Gobierno de España) and SEÑALES (VA026P17; Junta de Castilla y León and UE-FEDER). GS-B was supported by two SpanishMinistry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness Postdoctoral grants (FJCI 2016-30121 and IJC2019-040571-I; FEDER funds). AIG-C was supported by the Spanish MINECO (Juan de la Cierva-Incorporación grant IJCI-2017-34052) and Comunidad de Madrid (project REMEDINAL TE-CMS2018/EMT-4338).MG-Hwas supported by an FPI contract (PRE2018-084106) from Spanish MICINN.
Version del Editor
Propietario de los Derechos
Elsevier
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
restrictedAccess
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