Abstract

Understanding the dynamics of treeline ecotones under global change requires long-term ecological and environmental data. The Stillberg ecological treeline research site in the Swiss Alps was established in 1975 by planting 92,000 seedlings of Larix decidua, Pinus cembra and Pinus mugo ssp. uncinata, and has been continuously monitored since then. Here, we present curated long-term data acquired over almost 50 years at the Stillberg site, and we synthesise the major research findings. The long-term datasets comprise 6.5 million ecological and environmental records from the 40-year afforestation experiment, as well as from a 9-year free-air CO2 enrichment experiment crossed with a 6-year soil warming experiment, a 12-year nutrient addition experiment and an 8-year multifactorial tree seedling recruitment experiment. Our datasets further include 38 million records of 25 meteorological parameters measured at an hourly resolution from 1975 to 1996, and at a 10 min resolution since 1997. We provide all datasets and the corresponding metadata as open research data. Almost five decades of research in this treeline ecotone showed high mortality after tree establishment that was closely related to microclimatic variability. The two Pinus species survived at a much lower rate than L. decidua, due to indirect pathogen interactions. Furthermore, CO2 enrichment only increased growth of L. decidua, while warming increased growth of P. mugo ssp. uncinata and two Vaccinium shrub species. Enhanced nutrient availability stimulated growth in tree and understorey shrub species. In addition, soil warming and CO2 enrichment stimulated microbial activity and decreased soil carbon stocks. These findings improve our understanding of ecological processes in the treeline ecotone under global change and confirm the importance of tree growth and establishment limitations. The enhanced availability and quality of these long-term data are expected to foster whole-system approaches and transdisciplinary research syntheses, supporting the development of effective global change adaptation strategies.

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