Mountain Taiga in a Warming Climate: Contrast of Siberian Pine Growth along an Elevation Gradient

Author:

Kharuk Viacheslav I.123ORCID,Petrov Il’ya A.123ORCID,Golyukov Alexey S.123ORCID,Im Sergei T.1234ORCID,Shushpanov Alexander S.134

Affiliation:

1. Sukachev Institute of Forests, Federal Scientific Center, Russian Academy of Science, Siberian Branch, Academgorodok 50/28, Krasnoyarsk 660036, Russia

2. Institute of Space and Information Technologies, Institute of Ecology and Geography, Siberian Federal University, Svobodny Str. 79, Krasnoyarsk 660041, Russia

3. Laboratory of Biodiversity and Ecology, Tomsk State University, Lenina Str. 36, Tomsk 634050, Russia

4. Institute of Space Research and High Technologies, Reshetnev Siberian State University of Science and Technology, Krasnoyarsky Rabochy Str. 31, Krasnoyarsk 660014, Russia

Abstract

The growth and survival of trees in the Siberian Mountains are experiencing a strong influence on climate warming. We analyzed Siberian pine (SP, Pinus sibirica) growth within the treeline ecotone in high (>1000 m) and low (<900 m) lands. We used ground surveys, dendrochronology, and climate variable data analysis. We found a contrasting response of SP growth with increasing air temperature and moisture parameters along the elevation gradient. In the treeline ecotone and highlands, the tree’s growth has been increasing since warming onset in the 1970s, whereas in the lowlands, the initial growth increase switched to a growth drop since the beginning of the 2000s, with a consequent partial mortality of the Siberian pine forest caused by warming-driven water stress in combination with bark borers’ attacks. This mortality suggests the retraction of the Siberian pine range in the lowlands of the Siberian Mountains. The projected drought increase will likely lead to the substitution of Siberian pine with drought-tolerant species. The tree’s growth index (GI) dependence on air temperature and moisture variables includes two phases. In the first phase (since the warming onset in the 1970s), the trees’ GI was positively correlated with elevated temperature, whereas correlations with precipitation and soil moisture were negative. During the second phase (since the increase in warming in the 2000s), negative correlations between the GI and moisture variables switched to positive ones. The correlations of the GI with air temperature switched from positive to mostly insignificant. The wind’s influence on the trees’ growth changed from negative to insignificant since the 2000s within all elevation belts. Afforestation within the areas of Siberian pine mortality should not be based on the planting of Siberian pine but on drought-tolerant species such as larch (Larix sibirica) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris).

Funder

Tomsk State University Development Program

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Forestry

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