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Timing and Order of Extreme Drought and Wetness Determine Bioclimatic Sensitivity of Tree Growth

Authors :
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development
Camarero, Jesús Julio [0000-0003-2436-2922]
Wu, Xiuchen
Liu, Hongyan
Hartmann, Henrik
Ciais, Philippe
Kimball, John
Schwalm, Christopher R.
Camarero, Jesús Julio
Chen, Anping
Gentine, Pierre
Yang, Yuting
Zhang, Shulei
Li, Xiaoyan
Xu, Chongyang
Zhang, Wen
Li, Zongshan
Chen, Deliang
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development
Camarero, Jesús Julio [0000-0003-2436-2922]
Wu, Xiuchen
Liu, Hongyan
Hartmann, Henrik
Ciais, Philippe
Kimball, John
Schwalm, Christopher R.
Camarero, Jesús Julio
Chen, Anping
Gentine, Pierre
Yang, Yuting
Zhang, Shulei
Li, Xiaoyan
Xu, Chongyang
Zhang, Wen
Li, Zongshan
Chen, Deliang
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Tree resistance to extreme droughts and post-drought recovery are sensitive to the drought timing. However, how the bioclimatic sensitivity of tree growth may vary with the timing and order of extreme droughts and wetness is still poorly understood. Here, we quantified the bioclimatic sensitivity of tree growth in the period of 1951–2013 under different seasonal extreme drought/wetness regimes over the extra-tropical Northern Hemisphere, using 1,032 tree ring chronologies from 121 gymnosperm and angiosperm species. We found a negative asymmetry in tree growth under regimes with seasonal extreme droughts. With extreme drought, tree growth in arid and temperate dry regions is more negatively impacted by pre-growing-season (PGS) extreme droughts. Clade-wise, angiosperms are more sensitive to PGS water availability, and gymnosperms to legacy effects of the preceding tree growth conditions in temperate dry and humid regions. Our finding of divergent bioclimatic legacy effects underscores contrasting trends in forest responses to drought across different ecoregions and functional groups in a more extreme climate.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442727899
Document Type :
Electronic Resource