Climate-induced treeline mortality during the termination of the Little Ice Age in the Greater Yellowstone Ecoregion, USA

Author:

Rochner Maegen L1ORCID,Heeter Karen J2,Harley Grant L2,Bekker Matthew F3ORCID,Horn Sally P4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography and Geosciences, The University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, USA

2. Department of Geography and Geological Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, USA

3. Department of Geography, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, USA

4. Department of Geography, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA

Abstract

Paleoclimate reconstructions for the western US show spatial variability in the timing, duration, and magnitude of climate changes within the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA, ca. 900–1350 CE) and Little Ice Age (LIA, ca. 1350–1850 CE), indicating that additional data are needed to more completely characterize late-Holocene climate change in the region. Here, we use dendrochronology to investigate how climate changes during the MCA and LIA affected a treeline, whitebark pine ( Pinus albicaulis Engelm.) ecosystem in the Greater Yellowstone Ecoregion (GYE). We present two new millennial-length tree-ring chronologies and multiple lines of tree-ring evidence from living and remnant whitebark pine and Engelmann spruce ( Picea engelmannii Parry ex. Engelm.) trees, including patterns of establishment and mortality; changes in tree growth; frost rings; and blue-intensity-based, reconstructed summer temperatures, to highlight the terminus of the LIA as one of the coldest periods of the last millennium for the GYE. Patterns of tree establishment and mortality indicate conditions favorable to recruitment during the latter half of the MCA and climate-induced mortality of trees during the middle-to-late LIA. These patterns correspond with decreased growth, frost damage, and reconstructed cooler temperature anomalies for the 1800–1850 CE period. Results provide important insight into how past climate change affected important GYE ecosystems and highlight the value of using multiple lines of proxy evidence, along with climate reconstructions of high spatial resolution, to better describe spatial and temporal variability in MCA and LIA climate and the ecological influence of climate change.

Funder

AAG Mountain Geography Specialty Group

National Science Foundation

American Association of Geographers

Golden Key International Honour Society

AAG Paleoenvironmental Change Specialty Group

AAG Biogeography Specialty Group

Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

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

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