Abstract

Chinese pine (Pinus tabulaeformis Carr.) plays an important role in maintaining ecosystem health and stability in western Liaoning Province and the southern Horqin sand land, Northeast China, with benefits including sand fixation and soil erosion. In the context of climate change, developing a better understanding of the relationship between climate factors and growth rates of this species will be extremely valuable in guiding management activities and meeting regional conservation objectives. Here, the results based on two groups of tree-ring samples show that the radial growth of Chinese pine is controlled primarily by water conditions. The longer chronology had the highest correlation coefficient with the January–September mean self-calibrating Palmer Drought Severity Index (scPDSI); therefore, drought variability was reconstructed for the period 1859–2014. Statistical analysis showed that our model explained 41.9% of the variance in radial growth during the 1951–2014 calibration period. Extreme dry and wet events, defined as the criteria of one standard deviation less or greater than the mean value, accounted for 19.9% and 18.6% of the 156-year climate record, respectively. During the past century, the regional hydroclimate experienced significant long-term fluctuations. The dry periods occurred from the early-1900s–1930s and 1980s–2000s, and the wet periods occurred from the 1940s–1970s. The drought reconstruction was consistent with the decreasing trend of the East Asian summer monsoon since the late 1970s. The reconstructed temporal patterns in hydroclimate in western Liaoning were closely related to the large-scale climate drivers in the North Pacific and the tropical equatorial Pacific. The teleconnections were confirmed by spatial correlations between the reconstructed sequence and sea surface temperature (SST) in the North Pacific, as well as the correlations with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) indices. Aerosols played an important role in affecting drought variations over the past several decades. Moisture stress caused by global warming and interdecadal changes in the PDO will have long-term effects on the growth of pines in the study area in the future.

Highlights

  • As one of the largest forest plantation countries, China has launched several important national forestry projects

  • The common signal strength among the tree-ring series and the reliability of the chronologies were assessed by mean sensitivity (MS), mean correlation between all series (MCS), and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) [22]

  • (12.804) in the WFY chronology could be attributed to the difference in length of both chronologies, The relatively lower value of Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) (12.804) in the WFY chronology could be attributed to the difference in length of both chronologies, that is, the WFY span was longer than the SH chronology

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Summary

Introduction

As one of the largest forest plantation countries, China has launched several important national forestry projects. The Three North Shelterbelt Project, launched in 1978, is playing a critical role in controlling desertification in Northeast China, North China, and Northwest China [1]. Forests 2019, 10, 752 the southward invasion of the Horqin sandy land has been effectively controlled in western Liaoning. The decreasing trend of soil erosion and increasing agricultural production capacity are attributed to afforestation in this region. Mongolica Litv.), the first introduced plantation species in the Horqin sand land (planting began in the 1990s), has shown an obvious decline due to dieback, poor regeneration capacity, and reduced growth rate [3]. Chinese pine (Pinus tabulaeformis Carr.), another important afforestation species, has experienced degeneration phenomena in western Liaoning in the southern Horqin sand land margin region [4]

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