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Increasing atmospheric dryness reduces boreal forest tree growth

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Increasing atmospheric dryness reduces boreal forest tree growth

A. Mirabel, M. P. Girardin, et al.

Discover how rising atmospheric vapor pressure deficit (VPD) is influencing boreal forest growth in Canada. This groundbreaking research conducted by Ariane Mirabel, Martin P. Girardin, Juha Metsaranta, Danielle Way, and Peter B. Reich delves into the adverse effects of VPD changes on tree growth from 1951 to 2018, highlighting significant implications for carbon storage and ecosystem services.... show more
Abstract
Rising atmospheric vapour pressure deficit (VPD) associated with climate change affects boreal forest growth via stomatal closure and soil dryness. However, the relationship between VPD and forest growth depends on the climatic context. Here we assess Canadian boreal forest responses to VPD changes from 1951–2018 using a well-replicated tree-growth increment network with approximately 5,000 species-site combinations. Of the 3,559 successful growth models, we observed a relationship between growth and concurrent summer VPD in one-third of the species-site combinations, and between growth and prior summer VPD in almost half of those combinations. The relationship between previous year VPD and current year growth was almost exclusively negative, while current year VPD also tended to reduce growth. Tree species, age, annual temperature, and soil moisture primarily determined tree VPD responses. Younger trees and species like white spruce and Douglas fir exhibited higher VPD sensitivity, as did areas with high annual temperature and low soil moisture. Since 1951, summer VPD increases in Canada have paralleled tree growth decreases, particularly in spruce species. Accelerating atmospheric dryness in the decades ahead will impair carbon storage and societal-economic services.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 30, 2023
Authors
Ariane Mirabel, Martin P. Girardin, Juha Metsaranta, Danielle Way, Peter B. Reich
Tags
vapor pressure deficit
boreal forest
tree growth
climate change
carbon storage
ecosystem services
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