Regional climate moderately influences species-mixing effect on tree growth-climate relationships and drought resistance for beech and pine across Europe
•Patterns of mixing effects on pine/beech growth-climate relationships were analyzed across Europe.•Tree growth-climate relationships were driven by the regional climate conditions.•Differences in climate-growth relationships between pure and mixed beech stands were evidenced in the driest climates....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Forest ecology and management 2022-09, Vol.520, p.120317, Article 120317 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Patterns of mixing effects on pine/beech growth-climate relationships were analyzed across Europe.•Tree growth-climate relationships were driven by the regional climate conditions.•Differences in climate-growth relationships between pure and mixed beech stands were evidenced in the driest climates.•On average, mixing had no significant effect on resistance to drought events.•Growth reduction during drought events was lower in mixed compared to pure pine stands in sites with higher water balance in autumn.
Increasing species diversity is considered a promising strategy to mitigate the negative impacts of global change on forests. However, the interactions between regional climate conditions and species-mixing effects on climate-growth relationships and drought resistance remain poorly documented.
In this study, we investigated the patterns of species-mixing effects over a large gradient of environmental conditions throughout Europe for European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.), two species with contrasted ecological traits. We hypothesized that across large geographical scales, the difference of climate-growth relationships and drought resistance between pure and mixed stands would be dependent on regional climate. We used tree ring chronologies derived from 1143 beech and 1164 pine trees sampled in 30 study sites, each composed of one mixed stand of beech and pine and of the two corresponding pure stands located in similar site conditions. For each site and stand, we used Bootstrapped Correlation Coefficients (BCCs) on standardized chronologies and growth reduction during drought years on raw chronologies to analyze the difference in climate-tree growth relationships and resistance to drought between pure and mixed stands.
We found consistent large-scale spatial patterns of climate-growth relationships. Those patterns were similar for both species. With the exception of the driest climates where pure and mixed beech stands tended to display differences in growth correlation with the main climatic drivers, the mixing effects on the BCCs were highly variable, resulting in the lack of a coherent response to mixing. No consistent species-mixing effect on drought resistance was found within and across climate zones. On average, mixing had no significant effect on drought resistance for neither species, yet it increased pine resistance in sites with higher climatic water balance in autumn. Also, beech and pine most often differed |
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ISSN: | 0378-1127 1872-7042 1872-7042 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.foreco.2022.120317 |