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A critical thermal transition driving spring phenology of Northern Hemisphere conifers
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4694370
Author(s) Huang, Jian-Guo; Zhang, Yaling; Wang, Minhuang; Yu, Xiaohan; Deslauriers, Annie; Fonti, Patrick; Liang, Eryuan; Makinen, Harri; Oberhuber, Walter; Rathgeber, Cyrille B. K.; Tognetti, Roberto; Treml, Vaclav; Yang, Bao; Zhai, Lihong; Zhang, Jiao-Lin; Antonucci, Serena; Bergeron, Yves; Camarero, Jesus Julio; Campelo, Filipe; Cufar, Katarina; Cuny, Henri E.; De Luis, Martin; Fajstavr, Marek; Giovannelli, Alessio; Gricar, Jozica; Gruber, Andreas; Gryc, Vladimir; Gueney, Aylin; Jyske, Tuula; Kaspar, Jakub; King, Gregory; Krause, Cornelia; Lemay, Audrey; Liu, Feng; Lombardi, Fabio; del Castillo, Edurne Martinez; Morin, Hubert; Nabais, Cristina; Nojd, Pekka; Peters, Richard L.; Prislan, Peter; Saracino, Antonio; Shishov, Vladimir V.; Swidrak, Irene; Vavrcik, Hanus; Vieira, Joana; Zeng, Qiao; Liu, Yu; Rossi, Sergio
Author(s) at UniBasel Peters, Richard
Year 2023
Title A critical thermal transition driving spring phenology of Northern Hemisphere conifers
Journal Global Change Biology
Volume 29
Number 6
Pages / Article-Number 1606-1617
Keywords cell wall thickening; Northern Hemisphere conifer; photoperiod; spring forcing; winter chilling; xylem phenology
Mesh terms Tracheophyta; Bayes Theorem; Forests; Cold Temperature; Temperature; Climate Change; Seasons
Abstract Despite growing interest in predicting plant phenological shifts, advanced spring phenology by global climate change remains debated. Evidence documenting either small or large advancement of spring phenology to rising temperature over the spatio-temporal scales implies a potential existence of a thermal threshold in the responses of forests to global warming. We collected a unique data set of xylem cell-wall-thickening onset dates in 20 coniferous species covering a broad mean annual temperature (MAT) gradient (-3.05 to 22.9 degrees C) across the Northern Hemisphere (latitudes 23 degrees-66 degrees N). Along the MAT gradient, we identified a threshold temperature (using segmented regression) of 4.9 +/- 1.1 degrees C, above which the response of xylem phenology to rising temperatures significantly decline. This threshold separates the Northern Hemisphere conifers into cold and warm thermal niches, with MAT and spring forcing being the primary drivers for the onset dates (estimated by linear and Bayesian mixed-effect models), respectively. The identified thermal threshold should be integrated into the Earth-System-Models for a better understanding of spring phenology in response to global warming and an improved prediction of global climate-carbon feedbacks.
Publisher Wiley-Blackwell
ISSN/ISBN 1354-1013 ; 1365-2486
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/95243/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1111/gcb.16543
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36451586
ISI-Number 000927882200001
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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03/05/2024