The arctic tree line as a record of past and recent climatic changes

Past and recent changes in the position of the arctic tree line and spatial structure of nearby forests are reviewed. The advancing tree line in the arctic tundra in the first half of the Holocene was promoted by sexual regeneration because of warmer climate. The northernmost tree-line positions wer...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Reviews
Main Authors: Payette, Serge, Lavoie, Claude
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/a94-004
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/a94-004
Description
Summary:Past and recent changes in the position of the arctic tree line and spatial structure of nearby forests are reviewed. The advancing tree line in the arctic tundra in the first half of the Holocene was promoted by sexual regeneration because of warmer climate. The northernmost tree-line positions were reached in early Holocene in western North America and northern Eurasia, and during or after mid-Holocene in central and eastern North America. The position of the arctic tree line remained rather stable across the northern hemisphere from 3500 years BP to the present. General cooling during the late Holocene did not induce significant retreat of the tree line at sites not affected by catastrophic disturbances (fire) because trees and forests were able to survive through vegetative regeneration. Minor displacements deduced from dendroecological data were recorded during the last 500 years, whereas more important structural changes occurred in the nearby northernmost forests and tree groves through the shifting dominance of growth forms in preestablished tree and forest populations. The spatiotemporal pattern of tree-line and forest changes along the arctic border suggests that both equilibrium and nonequilibrium conditions prevailed during the Holocene.Key words: tree line, Arctic, climate change, paleoecology, Holocene.