Summary
Published in Trees https://doi.org/0.1007/s00468-013-0899-4.
Tree growth in most boreal forests is strongly regulated by temperature and nitrogen (N) availability. The expected increases in soil temperature and N deposition over the next decades have the potential to affect the phenology of tree growth and xylogenesis. To test for these changes on xylogenesis of balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill), 12 mature trees were subjected to a combination of experimentally increased soil temperature (+4 °C) with an earlier snowmelt (2–3 weeks) and N deposition (3 x ambient rain N concentrations using NH4–NO3 in artificial precipitation) over a 3-year period. Increased soil temperature and atmospheric N deposition had no significant effect on the number of tracheids produced (38–51), tracheid diameter (27.2–29.0 mm) and cell wall thickness (2.5–3.1 mm). For the 3 years of treatment, xylogenesis was initiated at minimum and average daily air temperatures of 0.6 ± 0.5 and 6.5 ± 0.6 °C, respectively, with inter-annual differences of 17 days in the onset of xylogenesis. The earlier snowmelt induced by soil warming did not hasten resumption of xylogenesis, and the time dynamics of xylogenesis was not affected by higher N deposition. Our results suggest that soil temperature and the timing of snowmelt have no direct influence on the breaking of cambium dormancy in balsam fir. The short-term effects of increased soil temperature and N deposition on xylogenesis of mature balsam fir appear to be small compared with the effects of air temperature and are likely to be associated with a persistent N limitation.
Sector(s):
Forests
Categorie(s):
Scientific Article
Theme(s):
Ecosystems and Environment, Forestry Research, Forests
Departmental author(s):
Author(s)
D'ORANGEVILLE, Loïc, Benoît CÔTÉ, Daniel HOULE, Hubert MORIN and Louis DUCHESNE
Format :
PDF available upon request
How to get the publication :
Keywords :
climat, sol, sécheresse, température, article scientifique de recherche forestière, simulation, écosystèmes et environnement, ecosystems and environment, climate, soils, drought, temperature