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Determining the Role of Stand Structure in Shaping Climate-Growth Relationships in Eastern Temperate Forests of the US
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Forests play an integral role in regulating the exchange of carbon between the atmosphere and the terrestrial biosphere. These ecosystems only cover for about 30% of the land surface, forests account for almost half of the annual carbon uptake. The amount of carbon sequestered by forest ecosystems is largely dependent upon favorable climate conditions that promote increases in growth. Under the lowest emissions scenario, the United States is projected to undergo an almost 2˚C increase in temperature by the end of the century and it is important that we assess the contemporary climate-growth relationships of multiple forest types to better evaluate the stability and persistence of this vital carbon sink. Tree rings have been used to assess forest response to macroclimate conditions, but often the trees sampled for these analyses are only the most dominant individuals in the forest. This excludes individuals found in the understory of complex forest systems, such as those in the temperate forests of the eastern United States, and climate-growth relationships calculated from only dominant individuals may not be representative of the entire stand. Recent studies have shown that structural complexity of the forest canopy can significantly alter the microclimate conditions at which understory trees grow. Altered growth responses of the understory trees could increase the resilience of complex forest systems to the changes in temperature that are expected by the end of the century. Here, I apply dendrochronology methods to quantify climate-growth relationships of canopy strata in temperate forests of the eastern United States. Many different forest types are found in this region and have been the focus of numerous species-specific studies on climate growth relationships. However, the integrated response of co-occurring species within canopy units is not often investigated, despite measures of productivity being an integration of ecosystem processes. I present research that
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1143787472
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource