A fingerprint of climate change across pine forests of Sweden

Jacek Oleksyn, Tomasz P. Wyka, Roma Żytkowiak, Marcin Zadworny, Joanna Mucha, Monika Dering, Krzysztof Ufnalski, Bengt Nihlgård, Peter B. Reich

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Climate change has likely altered high-latitude forests globally, but direct evidence remains rare. Here we show that throughout a ≈1000-km transect in Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forests in Sweden, mature trees in ≈2015 had longer needles with shorter lifetimes than did trees in ≈1915. These century-scale shifts in needle traits were detected by sampling needles at 74 sites from 2012 to 2017 along the same transect where needle traits had been assessed at 57 sites in 1914–1915. Climate warming of ≈1 °C all along the transect in the past century has driven this temporal shift in foliage traits known to be physiologically critical to growth and carbon cycling processes. These century-scale changes in Scandinavian Scots pine forests represent a fingerprint of climate change on a fundamental biological element, the leaf, with repercussions for productivity and sensitivity to future climate, which are likely to be mirrored by similar changes for evergreen conifers across the boreal biome.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1739-1746
    Number of pages8
    JournalEcology Letters
    Volume23
    Issue number12
    Early online date2020 Aug 28
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2020 Dec

    Subject classification (UKÄ)

    • Ecology (including Biodiversity Conservation)

    Free keywords

    • Boreal forests
    • climatic drivers
    • functional traits
    • needle longevity
    • Pinus sylvestris

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