Drought-induced dieback of riparian black alder as revealed by tree rings and oxygen isotopes
Other authors
Publication date
2020ISSN
0378-1127
Abstract
Progressive death of twigs and branches (i.e. dieback) may happen in response to biotic and abiotic agents
thereby reducing tree growth and eventually death. Drought-induced dieback has been seldom studied in riparian
habitats. We used retrospective tree-ring and oxygen isotope analyses to determine whether growth
patterns, sensitivity to climate and hydrology, as well as access to deep subsurface water and microhabitat river
variables, are related to Alnus glutinosa [L.] Gaertn. decline. Tree-ring sampling was conducted on A. glutinosa
individuals showing dieback ‘declining’ (defoliated) and compared with paired ‘non‐declining’ (not defoliated)
individuals in one slow-running stream. Radial growth of declining trees responded to the rate of precipitationevapotranspiration
from February to July more than non-declining. In contrast, the growth of non-declining
trees positively correlated with the October river discharge of the year preceding tree-ring formation. After the
severe 1998 drought, the growth of declining trees decreased in comparison to non‐declining trees, showing,
since then, early warning signals of dieback. Since 1998, resilience decreased as drought events accumulate in
declining trees, but not in non-declining trees. Also, trees situated near to the active river channel recover better
from drought. In the 1998 tree ring, we found differences in δ18O between vigour classes suggesting that nondeclining
trees had access to deeper water pools in drought years. Our findings provide new information that
could be used to forecast changes in black alder dynamics under the current climate change scenario, especially
at the species’ xeric range edges, and assist managers in designing riparian forest adaptation strategies.
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Keywords
Pages
10 p.
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Valor, T., Camprodon, J., Buscarini, S., Casals, P. (2020). Drought-induced dieback of riparian black alder as revealed by tree rings and oxygen isotopes. Forest Ecology and Management, 478(118500). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2020.118500
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