IANIGLA   20881
INSTITUTO ARGENTINO DE NIVOLOGIA, GLACIOLOGIA Y CIENCIAS AMBIENTALES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Long-term trends in radial growth associated with Nothofagus pumilio forest decline in Patagonia: Integrating local- into regional-scale patterns
Autor/es:
MILAGROS RODRÍGUEZ-CATÓN; RICARDO VILLALBA; A. M. SRUR; BRIAN LUCKMAN
Revista:
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2015 vol. 339 p. 44 - 56
ISSN:
0378-1127
Resumen:
Forest decline, or the premature loss of forest health, is a complex process not yet fully understood. Although reductions of radial growth have previously been recorded for individuals affected by decline, studies  describing the whole range of growth patterns from decline-affected stands are rare. We used principal component analysis to identify dominant patterns of radial growth in eleven Nothofagus pumilio stands in northern Patagonia that show external manifestations of forest dieback. At most sites, dominant growth patterns significantly different from the stand mean growth chronology were identified using either ring widths or basal area increments (BAIs). Due to the pervasive trend of decreasing ring width with increasing tree diameter, patterns of tree growth related to forest decline are better captured using BAIs. Three dominant patterns of growth were identified at most sites: (1) trees with the highest rates of growth during the first decades of the 20th century started a sustained reduction in radial growth in early 1940s reaching the lowest increments in the late 20th century; (2) trees with low growth over most of the 20th century substantially increased their growth rates in the 1960s concurrent with the growth decline in the previous group, and (3) trees with intermediate growth rates until mid-20th century showed a subsequent 20-30 year period with high rates of growth followed by a gradual reduction from the late 1980s to present. The onset of negative trends in radial growth associated with forest decline (patterns 1 and 3) occurs simultaneously at most stands. Contrary to expectations, large-dominant trees with the highest rates of growth seem to be the most severely affected by reductions in radial growth. These results are consistent with the concept of "decline disease stabilizing selection" where healthy dominant fast-growing trees in the forest are selectively affected by a combination of specifically detrimental factors. Dominant patterns at stand scale exhibit similar trends in radial growth between sites separated by more than 400 km in northern Patagonia suggesting that meso- to macro-scale environmental forcings modulate regional forest decline. Our results challenge traditional sampling designs used in dendroecological and dendroclimatological studies. Traditional sampling strategies, mostly targeted to dominant, climate-sensitive trees, will over emphasize the 20th century negative trends in Nothofagus stand growth associated with the largest stand trees. Only by including all individuals within a plot, will sampling provide consistent tree-growth estimates that represent the entire population. Additionally, as endogenous stand dynamics are not clearly reflected in mean growth estimates, dominant growthpatterns within a stand should be identified to assess dynamic processes such as forest decline correctly.