Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal

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Standard

Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal. / Kharal, Deepak Kumar; Thapa, Udya K.; St. George, Scott; Meilby, Henrik; Rayamajhi, Santosh; Bhuju, Dinesh R.

I: Dendrochronologia, Bind 41, 2017, s. 57-64.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kharal, DK, Thapa, UK, St. George, S, Meilby, H, Rayamajhi, S & Bhuju, DR 2017, 'Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal', Dendrochronologia, bind 41, s. 57-64. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2016.04.004

APA

Kharal, D. K., Thapa, U. K., St. George, S., Meilby, H., Rayamajhi, S., & Bhuju, D. R. (2017). Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal. Dendrochronologia, 41, 57-64. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2016.04.004

Vancouver

Kharal DK, Thapa UK, St. George S, Meilby H, Rayamajhi S, Bhuju DR. Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal. Dendrochronologia. 2017;41:57-64. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2016.04.004

Author

Kharal, Deepak Kumar ; Thapa, Udya K. ; St. George, Scott ; Meilby, Henrik ; Rayamajhi, Santosh ; Bhuju, Dinesh R. / Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal. I: Dendrochronologia. 2017 ; Bind 41. s. 57-64.

Bibtex

@article{2ea45700cad248dd82af6631e285e49f,
title = "Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal",
abstract = "Elevation is a strong determinant of local climate and may therefore be an important factor to consider when examining the association between climate and tree growth. In this study, we developed a set of tree-ring width records for Abies spectablis (D.Don Spach) in the Manang Valley of central Nepal Himalaya and tested how tree growth and the relationship between tree growth and climate varied across a 450-m elevation transect. The sampled trees had a median age of 115 years, and the oldest individual specimen, which was located at 3775 m, had more than 212 rings. The common signal shared across the tree-ring series was relatively weak, which is typical for ring-width chronologies from the Himalayas. Even though these forests are located within a semi-arid climate, temperature had a stronger and more consistent influence on Abies growth than precipitation. All three chronologies across the transect exhibited a negative relationship with mean March–June temperatures, which could reflect the impact of warm weather during the early part of the growing season, possibly mediated through its influence on evapotranspiration and soil moisture. While interannual fluctuations in tree growth were synchronous across sites, longer-term trends in growth varied across the transect, with high-elevation trees showing elevated growth during the last two or three decades and lower-elevation trees behaving just the opposite. These disparate trends suggest the factors that control longer-term trends in forest productivity vary substantially with elevation. For studies intending to use tree-ring width records in the Trans Himalaya as climate proxies, it may be preferable to collect specimens at lower forest sites, where the agreement across the population of trees is stronger. Because longer-term trends in ring width can differ substantially from one elevation to another in this region, it may also be necessary to collect a greater number of samples from several positions along an elevation gradient.",
keywords = "Abies spectabilis, Central Himalaya, Elevation transect, Nepal, Tree-climate relations",
author = "Kharal, {Deepak Kumar} and Thapa, {Udya K.} and {St. George}, Scott and Henrik Meilby and Santosh Rayamajhi and Bhuju, {Dinesh R.}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1016/j.dendro.2016.04.004",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "57--64",
journal = "Dendrochronologia",
issn = "1125-7865",
publisher = "Elsevier GmbH - Urban und Fischer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tree-climate relations along an elevational transect in Manang Valley, central Nepal

AU - Kharal, Deepak Kumar

AU - Thapa, Udya K.

AU - St. George, Scott

AU - Meilby, Henrik

AU - Rayamajhi, Santosh

AU - Bhuju, Dinesh R.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Elevation is a strong determinant of local climate and may therefore be an important factor to consider when examining the association between climate and tree growth. In this study, we developed a set of tree-ring width records for Abies spectablis (D.Don Spach) in the Manang Valley of central Nepal Himalaya and tested how tree growth and the relationship between tree growth and climate varied across a 450-m elevation transect. The sampled trees had a median age of 115 years, and the oldest individual specimen, which was located at 3775 m, had more than 212 rings. The common signal shared across the tree-ring series was relatively weak, which is typical for ring-width chronologies from the Himalayas. Even though these forests are located within a semi-arid climate, temperature had a stronger and more consistent influence on Abies growth than precipitation. All three chronologies across the transect exhibited a negative relationship with mean March–June temperatures, which could reflect the impact of warm weather during the early part of the growing season, possibly mediated through its influence on evapotranspiration and soil moisture. While interannual fluctuations in tree growth were synchronous across sites, longer-term trends in growth varied across the transect, with high-elevation trees showing elevated growth during the last two or three decades and lower-elevation trees behaving just the opposite. These disparate trends suggest the factors that control longer-term trends in forest productivity vary substantially with elevation. For studies intending to use tree-ring width records in the Trans Himalaya as climate proxies, it may be preferable to collect specimens at lower forest sites, where the agreement across the population of trees is stronger. Because longer-term trends in ring width can differ substantially from one elevation to another in this region, it may also be necessary to collect a greater number of samples from several positions along an elevation gradient.

AB - Elevation is a strong determinant of local climate and may therefore be an important factor to consider when examining the association between climate and tree growth. In this study, we developed a set of tree-ring width records for Abies spectablis (D.Don Spach) in the Manang Valley of central Nepal Himalaya and tested how tree growth and the relationship between tree growth and climate varied across a 450-m elevation transect. The sampled trees had a median age of 115 years, and the oldest individual specimen, which was located at 3775 m, had more than 212 rings. The common signal shared across the tree-ring series was relatively weak, which is typical for ring-width chronologies from the Himalayas. Even though these forests are located within a semi-arid climate, temperature had a stronger and more consistent influence on Abies growth than precipitation. All three chronologies across the transect exhibited a negative relationship with mean March–June temperatures, which could reflect the impact of warm weather during the early part of the growing season, possibly mediated through its influence on evapotranspiration and soil moisture. While interannual fluctuations in tree growth were synchronous across sites, longer-term trends in growth varied across the transect, with high-elevation trees showing elevated growth during the last two or three decades and lower-elevation trees behaving just the opposite. These disparate trends suggest the factors that control longer-term trends in forest productivity vary substantially with elevation. For studies intending to use tree-ring width records in the Trans Himalaya as climate proxies, it may be preferable to collect specimens at lower forest sites, where the agreement across the population of trees is stronger. Because longer-term trends in ring width can differ substantially from one elevation to another in this region, it may also be necessary to collect a greater number of samples from several positions along an elevation gradient.

KW - Abies spectabilis

KW - Central Himalaya

KW - Elevation transect

KW - Nepal

KW - Tree-climate relations

U2 - 10.1016/j.dendro.2016.04.004

DO - 10.1016/j.dendro.2016.04.004

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84964849900

VL - 41

SP - 57

EP - 64

JO - Dendrochronologia

JF - Dendrochronologia

SN - 1125-7865

ER -

ID: 178488253