Tree-ring width and density data around the Northern Hemisphere: Part 1, local and regional climate signals

Author:

Briffa Keith R.1,Osborn Timothy J.2,Schweingruber Fritz H.3,Jones Philip D.2,Shiyatov Stepan G.4,Vaganov Eugene A.5

Affiliation:

1. Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK;

2. Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK

3. Swiss Federal Institute of Forest, Snow and Landscape Research, Zurcherstrasse 111, CH-8903, Birmensdorf, Switzerland

4. Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 8 Marta Street 202, Ekaterinburg 620219, Russia

5. Institute of Forest, Siberian Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Akagemgorodok, Krasnoyarsk 660036, Russia

Abstract

A detailed description is presented of the statistical patterns of climate forcing of tree growth (annual maximum latewood density and ring-width time series), across a network of 387 specially selected conifer sites that circle the extra-tropical Northern Hemisphere. The in‘ uence of summer temperature dominates growth. A mean April–September response is optimum for describing the major forcing signal over the whole densito-metric network, though a shorter June–July season is more relevant in central and eastern Siberia. The ring- width chronologies also have a shorter optimum (June–August) seasonal signal, but this is much weaker than the density signal. The association between tree-ring density and precipitation variability (as measured by partial correlations to account for the correlation between temperature and precipitation) is considerably weaker than with temperature. The ring-width response to precipitation is dominated by ‘noise’ and local site in‘ uences, though a negative response to winter precipitation in northern Siberia is consistent with the suggestion of an in‘ uence of delayed snowmelt. Average correlations with winter temperatures are small for all regions and correlations with annual temperatures are positive only because of the strong link with summer temperatures. Reconstructions of summer temperature based on composite regional density chronologies for nine areas are presented. Five regions (northwestern North America, NWNA; eastern and central Canada, ECCA; northern Europe, NEUR; northern Siberia, NSIB; and eastern Siberia, ESIB) constitute an arbitrary ‘northern’ division of the network, while the four other regions (western North America, WNA; southern Europe, SEUR; central Asia, CAS; and the Tibetan Plateau, TIBP) make up the ‘southern’ part. We also present two larger composite regional reconstructions comprising the data from the five higher-latitude (HILAT) and four lower-latitude (LOLAT) areas respectively; and a single series made up of data from all regions (ALL), which is highly correlated with Northern Hemisphere mean summer temperature. We calculate time-dependent uncertainty ranges for each of these reconstructions, though they are not intended to represent long timescales of tempera ture variability (>100 years) because the technique used to assemble the site chronologies precludes this. Finally, we examine in more detail the reduced sensitivity in the tree-growth data to decadal-timescale summer-temperature trends during the last 50 years, identified in earlier published work.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archaeology,Global and Planetary Change

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