Climate controls on tree growth in the Western Mediterranean

Author:

Touchan Ramzi1,Anchukaitis Kevin J1,Meko David M1,Kerchouche Dalila2,Slimani Said3,Ilmen Rachid4,Hasnaoui Fouad5,Guibal Frederic6,Julio Camarero Jesus7,Sánchez-Salguero Raúl8,Piermattei Alma910,Sesbou Abdessadek11,Cook Benjamin I12,Sabir Mohamed11,Touchane Hayat13

Affiliation:

1. University of Arizona, USA

2. Institute of Veterinary and Agronomy Sciences, The University of Batna, Algeria

3. Faculty of Biological Sciences and Agronomy, Mouloud Mammeri University of Tizi-Ouzou, Algeria

4. Department of Hydraulic, Environment and Climate (HEC), Hassania School of Public Works, Morocco

5. Institute of Sylvo-pastoral of Tabarak, Tunisia

6. Mediterranean Institute for Biodiversity and Ecology of Marine and Continental, France

7. Pyrenean Institute of Ecology (IPE) – CSIC, Spain

8. Department of Physical, Chemical and Natural Systems, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain

9. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL, Switzerland

10. Marche Polytechnic University, Italy

11. National School of Forestry Engineering, Morocco

12. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Goddard Institute for Space Studies, USA

13. Faculty of Agriculture, University of Aleppo, Syria

Abstract

The first large-scale network of tree-ring chronologies from the western Mediterranean (WM; 32°N–43°N, 10°W–17°E) is described and analyzed to identify the seasonal climatic signal in indices of annual ring width. Correlation and rotated empirical orthogonal function analyses are applied to 85 tree-ring series and corresponding gridded climate data to assess the climate signal embedded in the network. Chronologies range in length from 80 to 1129 years. Monthly correlations and partial correlations show overall positive associations for Pinus halepensis (PIHA) and Cedrus atlantica (CDAT) with winter (December–February) and spring (March–May) precipitation across this network. In both seasons, the precipitation correlation with PIHA is stronger, while CDAT chronologies tend to be longer. A combination of positive correlations between growth and winter–summer precipitation and negative partial correlations with growing season temperatures suggests that chronologies in at least part of the network reflect soil moisture and the integrated effects of precipitation and evapotranspiration signal. The range of climate response observed across this network reflects a combination of both species and geographic influences. Western Moroccan chronologies have the strongest association with the North Atlantic Oscillation.

Funder

US National Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

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

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