[Report] Northeastern North America as a potential refugium for boreal forests in a warming climate

Thursday, June 16, 2016 - 13:52 in Earth & Climate

High precipitation in boreal northeastern North America could help forests withstand the expected temperature-driven increase in evaporative demand, but definitive evidence is lacking. Using a network of tree-ring collections from 16,450 stands across 583,000 km2 of boreal forests in Québec, Canada, we observe a latitudinal shift in the correlation of black spruce growth with temperature and reduced precipitation, from negative south of 49°N to largely positive to the north of that latitude. Our results suggest that the positive effect of a warmer climate on growth rates and growing season length north of 49°N outweighs the potential negative effect of lower water availability. Unlike the central and western portions of the continent’s boreal forest, northeastern North America may act as a climatic refugium in a warmer climate. Authors: L. D’Orangeville, L. Duchesne, D. Houle, D. Kneeshaw, B. Côté, N. Pederson

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