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Frost and drought: Effects of extreme weather events on stem carbon dynamics in a Mediterranean beech forest

Ettore D’Andrea, Negar Rezaie, Peter Prislan, Jožica Gričar, Alessio Collalti, Jan Muhr, Gioṙgio Matteucci

2020Plant Cell & Environment53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The effects of short‐term extreme events on tree functioning and physiology are still rather elusive. European beech is one of the most sensitive species to late frost and water shortage. We investigated the intra‐annual C dynamics in stems under such conditions. Wood formation and stem CO 2 efflux were monitored in a Mediterranean beech forest for 3 years (2015–2017), including a late frost (2016) and a summer drought (2017). The late frost reduced radial growth and, consequently, the amount of carbon fixed in the stem biomass by 80%. Stem carbon dioxide efflux in 2016 was reduced by 25%, which can be attributed to the reduction of effluxes due to growth respiration. Counter to our expectations, we found no effects of the 2017 summer drought on radial growth and stem carbon efflux. The studied extreme weather events had various effects on tree growth. Even though late spring frost had a strong impact on beech radial growth in the current year, trees fully recovered in the following growing season, indicating high resilience of beech to this stressful event.

Topics & Concepts

BeechFrost (temperature)Environmental scienceGrowing seasonCarbon dioxideFagus sylvaticaMediterranean climateBiomass (ecology)Climate changeBiologyBotanyAgronomyEcologyGeographyMeteorologyPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsTree-ring climate responsesFire effects on ecosystems
Frost and drought: Effects of extreme weather events on stem carbon dynamics in a Mediterranean beech forest | Litcius