Major tree species of Central European forests differ in their proportion of positive, negative, and nonstationary growth trends

Author:

Kašpar Jakub1ORCID,Tumajer Jan2ORCID,Altman Jan34ORCID,Altmanová Nela35ORCID,Čada Vojtěch4ORCID,Čihák Tomáš6,Doležal Jiří35ORCID,Fibich Pavel35ORCID,Janda Pavel4ORCID,Kaczka Ryszard2ORCID,Kolář Tomáš78ORCID,Lehejček Jiří9ORCID,Mašek Jiří2ORCID,Hellebrandová Kateřina Neudertová6ORCID,Rybníček Michal78ORCID,Rydval Miloš4ORCID,Shetti Rohan9ORCID,Svoboda Miroslav4ORCID,Šenfeldr Martin7ORCID,Šamonil Pavel17ORCID,Vašíčková Ivana1ORCID,Vejpustková Monika6ORCID,Treml Václav2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forest Ecology The Silva Tarouca Research Institute Brno Czech Republic

2. Department of Physical Geography and Geoecology, Faculty of Science Charles University Prague Czech Republic

3. Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences Třeboň Czech Republic

4. Department of Forest Ecology Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Czech Republic

5. Faculty of Science University of South Bohemia České Budějovice Czech Republic

6. Forestry and Game Management Research Institute Praha Czech Republic

7. Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology Mendel University in Brno Brno Czech Republic

8. Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Science Brno Czech Republic

9. Department of Environment, Faculty of Environment University of Jan Evangelista Purkyně Ústí nad Labem Czech Republic

Abstract

AbstractTemperate forests are undergoing significant transformations due to the influence of climate change, including varying responses of different tree species to increasing temperature and drought severity. To comprehensively understand the full range of growth responses, representative datasets spanning extensive site and climatic gradients are essential. This study utilizes tree‐ring data from 550 sites from the temperate forests of Czechia to assess growth trends of six dominant Central European tree species (European beech, Norway spruce, Scots pine, silver fir, sessile and pedunculate oak) over 1990–2014. By modeling mean growth series for each species and site, and employing principal component analysis, we identified the predominant growth trends. Over the study period, linear growth trends were evident across most sites (56% increasing, 32% decreasing, and 10% neutral). The proportion of sites with stationary positive trends increased from low toward high elevations, whereas the opposite was true for the stationary negative trends. Notably, within the middle range of their distribution (between 500 and 700 m a.s.l.), Norway spruce and European beech exhibited a mix of positive and negative growth trends. While Scots pine growth trends showed no clear elevation‐based pattern, silver fir and oaks displayed consistent positive growth trends regardless of site elevation, indicating resilience to the ongoing warming. We demonstrate divergent growth trajectories across space and among species. These findings are particularly important as recent warming has triggered a gradual shift in the elevation range of optimal growth conditions for most tree species and has also led to a decoupling of growth trends between lowlands and mountain areas. As a result, further future shifts in the elevation range and changes in species diversity of European temperate forests can be expected.

Funder

Ministerstvo Školství, Mládeže a Tělovýchovy

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences

Mendelova Univerzita v Brně

Technology Agency of the Czech Republic

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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