Abstract

Forest declines under global warming have received much attention in studies of forest ecology, yet such events in periods before climate warming have been less studied because of shortage in documentation of past decline events. Here we used dendroecological techniques to identify forest decline events in the past five and a half centuries for a juniper forest near Lhasa of Tibet, China. Data of tree ring-widths were obtained from 42 relatively old trees after sample collection, measurement and crossdating. Radial growth of these trees was significantly and positively correlated with total precipitation in May and June. Persistent and severe growth reductions, lasting for at least eight years, were identified for each sample. We found that greater than 35% of the trees exhibited persistent and severe growth reductions in the interval A.D. 1875–1883, suggesting a growth decline event in the forest. This growth decline was the most severe event in the past five and half centuries. The weakened Indian monsoon in A.D. 1875–1878, which would result in extreme and prolonged droughts at spatially large scale in the monsoon zone, was most likely the driving force for the forest decline event discovered in this study. Our results suggested that future risk of juniper forest declines in central Tibetan plateau will be related to extreme droughts which could be amplified by warming. The study highlighted the importance of examining growth trajectory of individual trees in assessing forest health in a long perspective.

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