Modelling the effect of temperature on height increment of Scots pine at high latitudes

The effect of temperature and precipitation on the height increment of Pinus sylvestris (L.) was modelled using data gathered from a total of 49 felled sample trees from five stands of Scots pine located along a latitudinal transect from the Arctic Circle up to the northern timberline in Finland. A...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Silva Fennica
Main Authors: Salminen, Hannu, Jalkanen, Risto
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Finnish Society of Forest Science 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.362
https://doaj.org/article/5e1eb3f82bd74258a7e593b34c284e78
Description
Summary:The effect of temperature and precipitation on the height increment of Pinus sylvestris (L.) was modelled using data gathered from a total of 49 felled sample trees from five stands of Scots pine located along a latitudinal transect from the Arctic Circle up to the northern timberline in Finland. A multilevel mixed effects model and cross-correlation analysis of prewhitened time series was used to analyse the dependence between height increment and monthly meteorological observations. The effect of the mean July temperature of the previous year on height increment proved to be very strong at high latitudes (r > 0.7). The mean November temperature of the year before the previous affected statistically significantly on height increment in the three northernmost stands. There was no correlation between height increment and precipitation in any of the sites. The final height increment model based on all stands included tree age, long-term mean temperature sum of site, and the mean July temperature of the previous year as independent variables. According to the model, one degreeâs change in July temperature results on average in 1.8 cm change in the next yearâs height increment. There was a modest but significant polynomial age-effect. The proportion of explained variance (at the year level) was 74%. The July temperature dependence on height increment was shown to be very strong, suggesting a high value of height increment in climate modelling at the tree line.