Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)

Spatial fingerprints of climate change on tree species distribution are usually detected at latitudinal or altitudinal extremes (arctic or alpine tree line), where temperatures play a key role in tree species distribution. However, early detection of recent climate change effects on tree species dis...

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Published in:Ecography
Main Authors: Lenoir, Jonathan, Gégout, Jean-Claude, Pierrat, Jean-Claude, Bontemps, Jean-Daniel, Dhôtr, Jean-Francois
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.au.dk/portal/da/publications/differences-between-tree-species-seedling-and-adult-altitudinal-distribution-in-mountain-forests-during-the-recent-warm-period-19862006(0179dd50-b4a9-11de-a554-000ea68e967b).html
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05791.x
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spelling ftuniaarhuspubl:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/0179dd50-b4a9-11de-a554-000ea68e967b 2023-05-15T15:17:56+02:00 Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006) Lenoir, Jonathan Gégout, Jean-Claude Pierrat, Jean-Claude Bontemps, Jean-Daniel Dhôtr, Jean-Francois 2009 https://pure.au.dk/portal/da/publications/differences-between-tree-species-seedling-and-adult-altitudinal-distribution-in-mountain-forests-during-the-recent-warm-period-19862006(0179dd50-b4a9-11de-a554-000ea68e967b).html https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05791.x eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Lenoir , J , Gégout , J-C , Pierrat , J-C , Bontemps , J-D & Dhôtr , J-F 2009 , ' Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006) ' , Ecography , vol. 32 , pp. 765-777 . https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05791.x article 2009 ftuniaarhuspubl https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05791.x 2020-07-18T20:57:49Z Spatial fingerprints of climate change on tree species distribution are usually detected at latitudinal or altitudinal extremes (arctic or alpine tree line), where temperatures play a key role in tree species distribution. However, early detection of recent climate change effects on tree species distribution across the overall temperature gradient remains poorly explored. Within French mountain forests, we investigated altitudinal distribution differences between seedling (≤50 cm tall and >1 yr old) and adult (>8 m tall) life stages for 17 European tree taxa, encompassing the entire forest elevation range from lowlands to the subalpine vegetation belt (50-2250 m a.s.l.) and spanning the latitudinal gradient from northern temperate to southern Mediterranean forests. We simultaneously identified seedlings and adults within the same vegetation plots. These twin observations gave us the equivalent of exactly paired plots in space with seedlings reflecting a response to the studied warm period (1986-2006) and adults reflecting a response to a former and cooler period. For 13 out of 17 species, records of the mean altitude of presence at the seedling life stage are higher than that at the adult life stage. The low altitudinal distribution limit of occurrences at the seedling life stage is, on average, 29 m higher than that at the adult life stage which is significant. The high altitudinal distribution limit also shows a similar trend but which is not significant. Complementary analyses using modelling techniques and focusing on the optimum elevation (i.e. the central position inside distribution ranges) have confirmed differences between life stages altitudinal distribution. Seedlings optima are mostly higher than adults optimum, reaching, on average, a 69 m gap. This overall trend showing higher altitudinal distribution at the seedling life stage in comparison to the adult one suggests a main driver of change highly related to elevation, such as climate warming that occurs during the studied period. Other drivers of change that could play an important role across elevation or act at more specific scales are also discussed as potential contributors to explain our results. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Aarhus University: Research Arctic Ecography 32 5 765 777
institution Open Polar
collection Aarhus University: Research
op_collection_id ftuniaarhuspubl
language English
description Spatial fingerprints of climate change on tree species distribution are usually detected at latitudinal or altitudinal extremes (arctic or alpine tree line), where temperatures play a key role in tree species distribution. However, early detection of recent climate change effects on tree species distribution across the overall temperature gradient remains poorly explored. Within French mountain forests, we investigated altitudinal distribution differences between seedling (≤50 cm tall and >1 yr old) and adult (>8 m tall) life stages for 17 European tree taxa, encompassing the entire forest elevation range from lowlands to the subalpine vegetation belt (50-2250 m a.s.l.) and spanning the latitudinal gradient from northern temperate to southern Mediterranean forests. We simultaneously identified seedlings and adults within the same vegetation plots. These twin observations gave us the equivalent of exactly paired plots in space with seedlings reflecting a response to the studied warm period (1986-2006) and adults reflecting a response to a former and cooler period. For 13 out of 17 species, records of the mean altitude of presence at the seedling life stage are higher than that at the adult life stage. The low altitudinal distribution limit of occurrences at the seedling life stage is, on average, 29 m higher than that at the adult life stage which is significant. The high altitudinal distribution limit also shows a similar trend but which is not significant. Complementary analyses using modelling techniques and focusing on the optimum elevation (i.e. the central position inside distribution ranges) have confirmed differences between life stages altitudinal distribution. Seedlings optima are mostly higher than adults optimum, reaching, on average, a 69 m gap. This overall trend showing higher altitudinal distribution at the seedling life stage in comparison to the adult one suggests a main driver of change highly related to elevation, such as climate warming that occurs during the studied period. Other drivers of change that could play an important role across elevation or act at more specific scales are also discussed as potential contributors to explain our results.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lenoir, Jonathan
Gégout, Jean-Claude
Pierrat, Jean-Claude
Bontemps, Jean-Daniel
Dhôtr, Jean-Francois
spellingShingle Lenoir, Jonathan
Gégout, Jean-Claude
Pierrat, Jean-Claude
Bontemps, Jean-Daniel
Dhôtr, Jean-Francois
Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)
author_facet Lenoir, Jonathan
Gégout, Jean-Claude
Pierrat, Jean-Claude
Bontemps, Jean-Daniel
Dhôtr, Jean-Francois
author_sort Lenoir, Jonathan
title Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)
title_short Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)
title_full Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)
title_fullStr Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)
title_full_unstemmed Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)
title_sort differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006)
publishDate 2009
url https://pure.au.dk/portal/da/publications/differences-between-tree-species-seedling-and-adult-altitudinal-distribution-in-mountain-forests-during-the-recent-warm-period-19862006(0179dd50-b4a9-11de-a554-000ea68e967b).html
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05791.x
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_source Lenoir , J , Gégout , J-C , Pierrat , J-C , Bontemps , J-D & Dhôtr , J-F 2009 , ' Differences between tree species seedling and adult altitudinal distribution in mountain forests during the recent warm period (1986-2006) ' , Ecography , vol. 32 , pp. 765-777 . https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05791.x
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05791.x
container_title Ecography
container_volume 32
container_issue 5
container_start_page 765
op_container_end_page 777
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