Forest growth responses to drought at short- and long-term scales in Spain: squeezing the stress memory from tree rings
Palabras clave : 
Área Biología Vegetal y Animal, Ecología
Annual tree rings
Black pine
Basal area increment
Dendroecology
European beech
Growth resilience
Scots pine
Silver fir
Fecha de publicación : 
2018
ISSN : 
2296-701X
Cita: 
Camarero, J.J. (Julio J); Gazol, A. (Antonio); Sangüesa-Barreda, G. (Gabriel); Cantero-Fariña, A. (Alejandro); Sanchez-Salguero, R. (Raúl); Sanchez-Miranda, A. (Angela); Granda, E. (Elena); Serra-Maluquer, X. (Xavier); Ibañez, R. (Ricardo). "Forest growth responses to drought at short- and long-term scales in Spain: squeezing the stress memory from tree rings". Frontiersin ecology and evolution. 2018; 6, 9. 1-11.
Resumen
Drought-triggered declines in forest productivity and associated die-off events have increased considerably due to climate warming in the last decades. There is an increasing interest in quantifying the resilience capacity of forests against climate warming and drought to uncover how different stands and tree species will resist and recover after more frequent and intense droughts. Trees form annual growth rings that represent an accurate record of how forest growth responded to past droughts. Here we use dendrochronology to quantify the radial growth of different forests subjected to contrasting climatic conditions in Spain during the last half century. Particularly, we considered four climatically contrasting areas where dominant forests showed clear signs of drought-induced dieback. Studied forests included wet sites dominated by silver fir (Abies alba) in the Pyrenees and beech (Fagus sylvatica) stands in northern Spain, and drought-prone sites dominated by Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) in eastern Spain and black pine (Pinus nigra) in the semi-arid south-eastern Spain. We quantified the growth reduction caused by different droughts and assessed the short-and long-term resilience capacity of declining vs. non-declining trees in each forest. In all cases, drought induced a marked growth reduction regardless tree vigor. However, the capacity to recover after drought (resilience) at short- and long-term scales varied greatly between declining and non-declining individuals. ..

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