Litcius/Paper detail

Abnormal Winter Drought-Induced Transient Dieback of Korean Fir in the Montane Forests of Mt. Jirisan, South Korea

Hangyeol Kim, Eunsuk Kim, Seon-Mi Lee, Yong‐Chan Cho

2024Journal of Plant Biology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Although climate change-related concerns have long been raised regarding the sudden dieback of Korean fir ( Abies koreana ), the event’s etiology and subsequent ecosystem processes must be explained. Our study aims to clarify the continuity or transience of mass mortality events within the coarse woody debris (CWD) structure and, if transient, to identify the climatic conditions (1974–2021) that could be responsible for the massive dying phenomena in Korean fir populations. On average, precipitation during the non-growing season (November–April as winter) constituted 18.5% relative to the growth period; in the winter of 1999, it was 4.8% due to an abnormal drought event. The dead stems occurred evenly across all size classes. In the CWD structure, the density and biomass of the dead fir individuals peaked in decay classes II or III. The size distribution of the retained fir was inverse-J shaped across the entire altitudinal range. The abnormal winter drought event, causing root damage by soil frost and heaving, may be one of the factors that increased Korean fir mortality across the entire stem size range. Despite transient cohort senescence, the retained Korean fir individuals transmitted drought-resistant traits into the regional pool following the drought event.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyRange (aeronautics)Coarse woody debrisMontane ecologyPrecipitationFrost (temperature)Growing seasonEcologyDouglas firBotanyGeographyHabitatMaterials scienceComposite materialMeteorologyForest Ecology and Biodiversity StudiesForest Insect Ecology and ManagementTree-ring climate responses