The Last Trees Standing: Climate modulates tree survival factors during a prolonged bark beetle outbreak in Europe

•Norway spruce survival during severe bark beetle outbreaks is a non-random process.•Chronic drought stress diminishes the ability of spruce trees to resist bark beetles.•Larger trees are more vulnerable but deeper crowns enhance survival potential.•Climate interacts with tree level factors, synergi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Agricultural and forest meteorology 2022-07, Vol.322, p.109025, Article 109025
Hauptverfasser: Korolyova, Nataliya, Buechling, Arne, Ďuračiová, Renata, Zabihi, Khodabakhsh, Turčáni, Marek, Svoboda, Miroslav, Bláha, Jaromír, Swarts, Kelly, Poláček, Miroslav, Hradecký, Jaromir, Červenka, Jaroslav, Němčák, Pavel, Schlyter, Fredrik, Jakuš, Rastislav
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Norway spruce survival during severe bark beetle outbreaks is a non-random process.•Chronic drought stress diminishes the ability of spruce trees to resist bark beetles.•Larger trees are more vulnerable but deeper crowns enhance survival potential.•Climate interacts with tree level factors, synergistically influencing survival.•Drought magnifies the negative effects of competition further affecting outcomes. Plant traits are an expression of strategic tradeoffs in plant performance that determine variation in allocation of finite resources to alternate physiological functions. Climate factors interact with plant traits to mediate tree survival. This study investigated survival dynamics in Norway spruce (Picea abies) in relation to tree-level morphological traits during a prolonged multi-year outbreak of the bark beetle, Ips typographus, in Central Europe. We acquired datasets describing the trait attributes of individual spruce using remote sensing and field surveys. We used nonlinear regression in a hypothesis-driven framework to quantify survival probability as a function of tree size, crown morphology, intraspecific competition and a growing season water balance. Extant spruce trees that persisted through the outbreak were spatially clustered, suggesting that survival was a non-random process. Larger diameter trees were more susceptible to bark beetles, reflecting either life history tradeoffs or a dynamic interaction between defense capacity and insect aggregation behavior. Competition had a strong negative effect on survival, presumably through resource limitation. Trees with more extensive crowns were buffered against bark beetles, ostensibly by a more robust photosynthetic capability and greater carbon reserves. The outbreak spanned a warming trend and conditions of anomalous aridity. Sustained water limitation during this period amplified the consequences of other factors, rendering even smaller trees vulnerable to colonization by insects. Our results are in agreement with prior research indicating that climate change has the potential to intensify bark beetle activity. However, forest outcomes will depend on complex cross-scale interactions between global climate trends and tree-level trait factors, as well as feedback effects associated with landscape patterns of stand structural diversity.
ISSN:0168-1923
1873-2240
1873-2240
DOI:10.1016/j.agrformet.2022.109025