4.8 Article

Declining tree growth resilience mediates subsequent forest mortality in the US Mountain West

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16826

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drought; forest mortality; growth; insect outbreak; Lloret indices; resilience; tree-ring

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Climate change-triggered forest die-off is a growing threat to global forests, but predicting it remains challenging. This study examines the relationship between tree growth resilience to drought and stand-level mortality using a large tree-ring dataset from the US Mountain West. The results show that declining resilience and low tree growth are strongly associated with mortality patterns. However, the potential for tree growth resilience to improve large-scale predictions of forest die-off under climate change is only moderate.
Climate change-triggered forest die-off is an increasing threat to global forests and carbon sequestration but remains extremely challenging to predict. Tree growth resilience metrics have been proposed as measurable proxies of tree susceptibility to mortality. However, it remains unclear whether tree growth resilience can improve predictions of stand-level mortality. Here, we use an extensive tree-ring dataset collected at similar to 3000 permanent forest inventory plots, spanning 13 dominant species across the US Mountain West, where forests have experienced strong drought and extensive die-off has been observed in the past two decades, to test the hypothesis that tree growth resilience to drought can explain and improve predictions of observed stand-level mortality. We found substantial increases in growth variability and temporal autocorrelation as well declining drought resistance and resilience for a number of species over the second half of the 20th century. Declining resilience and low tree growth were strongly associated with cross- and within-species patterns of mortality. Resilience metrics had similar explicative power compared to climate and stand structure, but the covariance structure among predictors implied that the effect of tree resilience on mortality could partially be explained by stand and climate variables. We conclude that tree growth resilience offers highly valuable insights on tree physiology by integrating the effect of stressors on forest mortality but may have only moderate potential to improve large-scale projections of forest die-off under climate change.

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