Abstract

Previously published isoline maps of Fennoscandian timberlines show that their highest elevations lie in the high mountain areas in central south Norway and from there the limits decrease in all directions. These maps are assumed to show differences in “climatic forest limits”, but the isoline patterns indicate that factors other than climate may be decisive in most of the area. Possibly the effects of ‘massenerhebung’ and the “summit syndrome” may locally have major effects on the timberline elevation. The main aim of the present study is to quantify the effect of latitude and mountain height on the regional variation of mountain birch timberline elevation. The study is a statistical analysis of previous published data on the timberline elevation and nearby mountain height. Selection of the study sites has been stratified to the Scandinavian mountain range (the Scandes) from 58 to 71 o N where the timberlines reach their highest elevations. The data indicates that only the high mountain massifs in S Norway and N Sweden are sufficiently high to allow birch forests to reach their potential elevations. Stepwise regression shows that latitude explains 70.9% while both latitude and mountain explain together 89.0% of the timberline variation. Where the mountains are low (approximately 1000 m higher than the measured local timberlines) effects of the summit syndrome will lower the timberline elevation substantially and climatically determined timberlines will probably not have been reached. This indicates that models of future timberlines and thereby the alpine area extent in a warmer world may result in unrealistic conclusions without taking account of local mountain heights.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe Scandinavian mountain range (the Scandes) stretches from 58 to 71o N

  • The Scandinavian mountain range stretches from 58 to 71o N

  • Variations in maximum timberline elevation and associated mountain heights from 58 to 71o N are shown in Figure 2 based on data shown in the Table

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Summary

Introduction

The Scandinavian mountain range (the Scandes) stretches from 58 to 71o N. Mountain height is highly variable with peaks higher than 2100 m only in south central Norway Mountain height is low in the southernmost and northernmost parts, and relatively low in the central parts (63–64o N). Published isoline timberline (forest limit) maps show major variURN:NBN:fi:tsv-oa48291. It is well known that in terms of temperature, latitude compensates for altitude, and timberline elevation decreases generally toward north. As a rule of thumb, one degree increase in latitude is roughly equal to a 122 m decrease in elevation, and to a 0.55 oC temperature decrease (Lee 1969; Montgomery 2006). Vegetation zones are often projected northwards, parallel with the timber-

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