globalchange  > 气候变化事实与影响
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.00398
WOS记录号: WOS:000462698000001
论文题名:
Daily Maximum Temperatures Induce Lagged Effects on Leaf Unfolding in Temperate Woody Species Across Large Elevational Gradients
作者: Bigler, Christof1,2; Vitasse, Yann2,3
通讯作者: Bigler, Christof
刊名: FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
ISSN: 1664-462X
出版年: 2019
卷: 10
语种: 英语
英文关键词: phenology ; conifers ; broadleaved species ; maximum temperature ; distributed lag models ; lag effects ; multivariate meta-analysis ; elevation
WOS关键词: CASE-CROSSOVER DESIGN ; DISTRIBUTED LAG ; AIR-POLLUTION ; BUD BURST ; PHENOLOGICAL MODELS ; SPRING PHENOLOGY ; TREE PHENOLOGY ; CLIMATE-CHANGE ; NORWAY SPRUCE ; PICEA-ABIES
WOS学科分类: Plant Sciences
WOS研究方向: Plant Sciences
英文摘要:

The timing of leaf unfolding in temperate woody species is predominantly controlled by the seasonal course of temperature in late winter and early spring. However, quantifying lagged temperature effects on spring phenology is still challenging. Here, we aimed at investigating lagged and potentially non-linear effects of daily maximum temperatures on the probability of leaf unfolding in temperate woody species growing across large elevational gradients. We analyzed 5280 observations of leaf-out time of four tree species (European beech, horse chestnut, European larch, Norway spruce) and one shrub species (common hazel) that were recorded by volunteers over 40 years at 42 locations in Switzerland. We used a case-crossover sampling design to match leaf-out dates with control dates (i.e., dates before or after leaf-out), and analyzed these data with conditional logistic regression accounting for lagged temperature effects over 60 days. Multivariate meta-analyses were used to synthesize lagged temperature and elevational effects on leaf unfolding across multiple phenological stations. Temperature effects on the probability of leaf unfolding were largest at relatively short lags (i.e., within ca. 10 days) and decreased with increasing lags. Short- to mid-term effects (i.e., within ca. 10 to 20 days) were larger for late-leafing species known to be photoperiod-sensitive (beech, Norway spruce). Temperature effects increased for the broadleaved species (horse chestnut, hazel, beech) with decreasing elevation, particularly within ca. 10 to 40 days, i.e., leaf unfolding occurs more rapidly at low elevations for a given daily maximum temperature. Our novel findings provide evidence of cumulative and long-term temperature effects on leaf unfolding, whereby the efficiency of relatively high temperatures to trigger leaf-out becomes higher shortly before bud burst. These lagged associations between temperature and leaf unfolding improve our understanding of phenological responses across temperate woody species with differing ecological requirements that occur along elevational gradients.


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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/132462
Appears in Collections:气候变化事实与影响

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作者单位: 1.Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Dept Environm Syst Sci, Inst Terr Ecosyst, Forest Ecol, Zurich, Switzerland
2.SwissForestLab, Birmensdorf, Switzerland
3.Swiss Fed Res Inst WSL, Forest Dynam, Disturbance Ecol, Birmensdorf, Switzerland

Recommended Citation:
Bigler, Christof,Vitasse, Yann. Daily Maximum Temperatures Induce Lagged Effects on Leaf Unfolding in Temperate Woody Species Across Large Elevational Gradients[J]. FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE,2019-01-01,10
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