4.4 Article

Climate change impacts on stand structure and competitive interactions in a southern Swedish spruce-beech forest

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume 129, Issue 3, Pages 261-276

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10342-009-0323-1

Keywords

Fagus sylvatica; Picea abies; Natural forest; Disturbance; Storm; Drought; Bark beetle; Interspecific competition; Competition index; Stand structure; Tree ring analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG [RO 910/10, BO 1906/3]
  2. Thure Rignells Foundation
  3. Swedish University of Agricultural Science (SLU)
  4. Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre at Alnarp

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It is believed that European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) will increase its competitive ability at its northern range margin in Scandinavia due to climate change. In mixed old-growth forests of beech and Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) at Siggaboda nature reserve (southern Sweden), stand structure characteristics were sequentially recorded in the years 2004, 2005 and 2007 as well as growth in stem diameter using tree-coring analyses. Using these measurements, we studied the effects on stand dynamics of an extreme storm event (2005 Gudrun hurricane), drought and heat (mid-summer 2006, spring 2007) and subsequent bark beetle attacks on spruce (growing season 2007), overlaid with warming tendencies. The storm, which caused disastrous damage in many stands nearby, had comparatively little impact on the structure of the spruce-beech stand. All together, only 32 trees (19 spruces, 10 beeches, 3 other species) per hectare were thrown or broken mainly in the leeward direction (NE) or impacted by secondary damage by uprooted neighbour trees; this represents 7% of the total tree number and 11% of the growing stock. Diameter and height structure did not change significantly. However, the 2006 drought and the 2007 attack of biotic agents changed the stand structure and composition strongly due to the death of about 19% of the dominating older spruce trees that accounted for 35% of total stand volume. This resulted in a considerable increase in beech's contribution to stem number (4% increase) and wood volume of the living stand (7% increase). A comparison of diameter growth of beech and spruce during the periods 1894-1949 and 1950-2005 showed a distinct decrease in growth superiority of spruce during the last 50 years. These results support the idea of a northward migration of European beech as a nemoral tree species in Sweden, due to a higher tolerance to the abiotic and biotic threats accompanying climate change and an increased competitive ability compared to boreal tree species Norway spruce.

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