4.7 Article

The Climatic Response of Tree Ring Width Components of Ash (Fraxinus excelsiorL.) and Common Oak (Quercus roburL.) from Eastern Europe

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f11050600

Keywords

ring-porous species; tree-ring width components; drought; stability maps; Eastern Europe

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Research and Innovation within Program 1-Development of national research and development system, Subprogram 1.2-Institutional Performance, RDI excellence funding projects [18PFE/16.10.2018]
  2. EU cross-border project Promote deadwood for resilient forests in the Romanian-Ukrainian cross border region (RESFOR) [2SOFT/1.2/13]
  3. AWI Strategy Fund Project-PalEX
  4. Helmholtz Climate Initiative-REKLIM
  5. [PN19070502]

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This paper aims to develop the first differentiated (earlywood-EW, latewood-LW, and total ring width-RW) dendrochronological series for ash (Fraxinus excelsiorL.) and oak (Quercus roburL.) trees from the Republic of Moldova, and to analyze their climatic response and their spatio-temporal stability. For this, 18 ash and 26 oak trees were cored from the Dobrusa protected area, Republic of Moldova, Eastern Europe, and new EW, LW, and RW chronologies were developed for ash and oak covering the last century. The obtained results showed that the RW and LW have a similar climatic response for both species, while EW is capturing interannual climate variations and has a different reaction. The analyses performed with monthly climatic data revealed a significant and negative correlation with the mean air temperature and a significant and positive correlation with precipitation and the Standardized Precipitation-Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI) for both ash and oak. The temperature during the vegetation period has a strong influence on all tree-ring components of ash, while for oak the strong correlation was found only for LW. The positive and significant correlation between LW and RW with precipitation for both species, suggests that ash and oak are sensitive to the hydrological component and the precipitation is the main tree growth-limiting factor. Despite the significant correlation with precipitation and temperature for the whole analyzed period, the 25-year moving correlation analyses show that they are not stable in time and can switch from positive to negative or vice versa, while the correlation with SPEI3 drought index, which is a integration of both climatic parameters, is stable in time. By employing the stability map analysis, we show that oak and ash tree ring components, from the eastern part of the Republic of Moldova, have a stable and significant correlation with SPEI3 and scPDSI drought indices from February (January) until September, over the eastern part of Europe.

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