Journal article
Authors list: Kunz, Marcel; Esper, Jan; Kuhl, Eileen; Schneider, Lea; Buentgen, Ulf; Hartl, Claudia
Publication year: 2023
Journal: Forests
Volume number: 14
Issue number: 7
eISSN: 1999-4907
Open access status: Gold
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.3390/f14071478
Publisher: MDPI
Abstract:
Though frequently used in dendroclimatology, European larch (Larix decidua Mill.) is regularly defoliated by mass outbreaks of the larch budmoth (Zeiraphera griseana Hb., LBM). The near-cyclic growth depressions are unrelated to but possibly coincide with cold summers, which challenges signal detection on interannual timescales. LBM defoliation events cause sharp maximum latewood density declines and irregular earlywood/latewood ratios in the outbreak year, followed by one or two anomalously narrow rings. Here, we present a process-based method integrating these diverse response patterns to identify and distinguish LBM-related signals from climate-induced deviations. Application to larch sites along elevational transects in the Swiss Alps reveals the algorithm to perform better than existing extreme event detection methods, though our approach enables additional differentiation between insect- and climate-induced signatures. The new process-based multi-parameter algorithm is a suitable tool to identify different causes of growth disturbances and will therefore help to improve both tree-ring-based climate and insect defoliation reconstructions.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Kunz, M., Esper, J., Kuhl, E., Schneider, L., Buentgen, U. and Hartl, C. (2023) Combining Tree-Ring Width and Density to Separate the Effects of Climate Variation and Insect Defoliation, Forests, 14(7), Article 1478. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14071478
APA Citation style: Kunz, M., Esper, J., Kuhl, E., Schneider, L., Buentgen, U., & Hartl, C. (2023). Combining Tree-Ring Width and Density to Separate the Effects of Climate Variation and Insect Defoliation. Forests. 14(7), Article 1478. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14071478
Keywords
Dendrochronology; EUROPEAN ALPS; extreme event detection; global change ecology; INSECT OUTBREAKS; LARCH BUDMOTH OUTBREAKS; Tree rings; WAVES