4.4 Article

Can drought tolerance of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) be increased through thinning?

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume 129, Issue 6, Pages 1109-1118

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10342-010-0397-9

Keywords

Norway spruce; Drought response; Thinning regime; Dendrochronology

Categories

Funding

  1. Landesgraduiertenforderung Baden-Wurttemberg

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To investigate whether drought tolerance of individual trees can be increased through the provision of more growing space, trees from a thinning experiment were analysed for reductions in radial growth during drought years and their subsequent recovery. Tree-ring widths were quantified on increment cores as well as stem discs of 32 trees from stands of a thinning trial established in 1974 in 27-year-old spruce stands in the Alpine Foreland of Southwest Germany. Three different thinning regimes of the trial were selected for this study: unthinned control (8 trees), moderate (13 trees) and heavy thinning (11 trees) intensities. All trees sampled were of a co-dominant to dominant canopy status. The standardisation of growth data was carried out using the software program ARSTAN (University of Arizona). For the year 1976-a widespread and severe drought year in Germany-we found year ring widths were not reduced compared to those of the pre-drought years for all treatments. However, we observed the formation of false year rings and resin ducts for this year in all trees investigated. The drought events in 1992 and 2003 led to severe growth depressions in the year of the drought event in all trees, regardless of previous thinning regimes. However, the resilience-the recovery of basal area growth in subsequent years-was significantly more rapid in trees from heavily thinned stands, even if the drought event occurred more than 10 years after the last thinning intervention. This indicates a shorter stress period for trees with more growing space, which may reduce the susceptibility to secondary pathogens or pest species such as bark beetles.

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