Asymmetric effects of hydroclimate extremes on eastern US tree growth: Implications on current demographic shifts and climate variability

Author:

Maxwell Justin T.1ORCID,Au Tsun Fung23ORCID,Kannenberg Steven A.4,Harley Grant L.5,Dannenberg Matthew P.6ORCID,Ficklin Darren L.1,Robeson Scott M.1,Férriz Macarena1,Benson Michael C.7,Lockwood Benjamin R.8,Novick Kimberly A.9ORCID,Phillips Richard P.10,Rochner Maegen L.11,Pederson Neil12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography Indiana University Bloomington Indiana USA

2. Institute for Global Change Biology University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

4. Department of Biology West Virginia University Morgantown West Virginia USA

5. Department of Earth and Spatial Sciences University of Idaho Moscow Idaho USA

6. Department of Geographical and Sustainability Sciences University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

7. School of Integrative Biology University of Illinois Urbana‐Champaign Illinois USA

8. Department of Ecosystem Science and Management Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

9. O'Neil School of Public and Environmental Affairs Indiana University Bloomington Indiana USA

10. Department of Biology Indiana University Bloomington Indiana USA

11. Department of Geographic and Environmental Sciences University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky USA

12. Harvard Forest Harvard University Petersham Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractForests around the world are experiencing changes due to climate variability and human land use. How these changes interact and influence the vulnerability of forests are not well understood. In the eastern United States, well‐documented anthropogenic disturbances and land‐use decisions, such as logging and fire suppression, have influenced forest species assemblages, leading to a demographic shift from forests dominated by xeric species to those dominated by mesic species. Contemporarily, the climate has changed and is expected to continue to warm and produce higher evaporative demand, imposing stronger drought stress on forest communities. Here, we use an extensive network of tree‐ring records from common hardwood species across ~100 sites and ~1300 trees in the eastern United States to examine the magnitude of growth response to both wet and dry climate extremes. We find that growth reductions during drought exceed the positive growth response to pluvials. Mesic species such as Liriodendron tulipifera and Acer saccharum, which are becoming more dominant, are more sensitive to drought than more xeric species, such as oaks (Quercus) and hickory (Carya), especially at moderate and extreme drought intensities. Although more extreme droughts produce a larger annual growth reduction, mild droughts resulted in the largest cumulative growth decreases due to their higher frequency. When using global climate model projections, all scenarios show drought frequency increasing substantially (3–9 times more likely) by 2100. Thus, the ongoing demographic shift toward more mesic species in the eastern United States combined with drier conditions results in larger drought‐induced growth declines, suggesting that drought will have an even larger impact on aboveground carbon uptake in the future in the eastern United States.

Funder

Harvard Forest, Harvard University

Indiana University Bloomington

Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

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