4.3 Article

Tree-growth responses across environmental gradients in subtropical Argentinean forests

Journal

PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume 214, Issue 11, Pages 1321-1334

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11258-013-0254-2

Keywords

Dendroecology; Climate responses; Environmental gradients; Yungas and Chaco forests

Funding

  1. Argentinean Agency for Promotion of Science and Technology [PICTR02-123]
  2. Argentinean Council of Research and Technology (CONICET)
  3. Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) [CRN 2047]
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [1138881] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Subtropical forests in montane ecosystems grow under a wide range of environmental conditions. However, little is known about the growth responses of subtropical trees to climate along ecological gradients. To assess how, and to what extent climate controls tree growth, we analyzed tree responses to climate for 15 chronologies from 4 different species (Schinopsis lorentzii, Juglans australis, Cedrela lilloi, Alnus acuminata) across a variety of environments in subtropical forests from northwestern Argentina (22-28A degrees S, 64-66A degrees W). Using correlation and principal component analysis, site and species differences in tree-growth responses to precipitation and temperature were determined along the elevation gradient from the dry-warm Chaco lowlands to the wet-cool montane Yungas. Our results show that species responses differ according to the severity in climate conditions along the elevation gradient. At sites with unfavorable conditions, mainly located at the extremes of the environmental gradient, responses of different species to climate variations are similar; in contrast, at sites with relatively mild conditions, tree growth displays a large variety of responses reflecting differences in both local environmental conditions and species physiology. Our research suggests that individualistic responses to environmental variability would determine differences in the type and timing of the responses of dominant trees to climate, which ultimately may shift species' assemblages in montane subtropical regions of South America under future climate changes.

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