6533b854fe1ef96bd12ae7c3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A millennium-long perspective on high-elevation pine recruitment in the Spanish central Pyrenees

J. Diego GalvánGabriel Sangüesa-barredaGabriel Sangüesa-barredaJan EsperUlf BüntgenUlf BüntgenJ. Julio Camarero

subject

0106 biological sciencesGlobal and Planetary Change010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEcologyPerspective (graphical)Climate changeForestry15. Life on land01 natural sciencesGeography13. Climate actionHigh elevationPhysical geography010606 plant biology & botany0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

Long-term fluctuations in forest recruitment, at time scales well beyond the life-span of individual trees, can be related to climate changes. The underlying climatic drivers are, however, often understudied. Here, we present the recruitment history of a high-elevation mountain pine (Pinus uncinata Ram.) forest in the Spanish central Pyrenees throughout the last millennium. A total of 1108 ring-width series translated into a continuous chronology from 924 to 2014 CE, which allowed estimated germination dates of 470 trees to be compared against decadal-scale temperature variability. High recruitment intensity mainly coincided with relatively warm periods in the early 14th, 15th, 19th, and 20th centuries, whereas cold phases during the mid-17th, early 18th, and mid-19th centuries overlapped with generally low recruitment rates. In revealing the importance of prolonged warm conditions for high-elevation pine recruitment in the Pyrenees, this study suggests increased densification and even possible upward migration of tree-line ecotones under predicted global warming.

https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-2018-0025