Earth’s hydroclimatic variability is increasing, with changes in the frequency of extreme events that may negatively affect forest ecosystems. We examined possible consequences of changing precipitation variability using tree rings in the conterminous United States. While many growth records showed either little evidence of precipitation limitation or linear relationships to precipitation, growth of some species (particularly those in semiarid regions) responded asymmetrically to precipitation such that tree growth reductions during dry years were greater than, and not compensated by, increases during wet years. The U.S. Southwest, in particular, showed a large increase in precipitation variability, coupled with asymmetric responses of grow...
As the atmosphere warms, precipitation events become larger, but less frequent. Yet, there is fundam...
1. Climate is widely assumed to influence physiological and demographic processes in trees, and henc...
Reprinted from: Monthly Weather Review, Vo. 93, No. 7, Pp. 421 to 443, 1965The relationships between...
Spatial patterns of precipitation in the southwestern United States result in a complex gradient fro...
In recent decades, intense droughts, insect outbreaks, and wildfires have led to decreasing tree gro...
In the early 1900s, tree-ring scientists began analyzing the relative widths of annual growth rings ...
Trees are spectacular things. One reason for their splendor is that they record annual growth data i...
Tree resistance to extreme droughts and post-drought recovery are sensitive to the drought timing. H...
The controls on forest carbon cycling are the focus of much interest, as forests store nearly half o...
In temperate forests, precipitation-productivity relationships have usually been considered linear a...
Several lines of evidence suggest that forest growth in many regions is declining as a consequence o...
Forests play an important role in the earth system, regulating climate, maintaining biodiversity, an...
International audienceThe CONterminous United States (CONUS) presents a large range of climate condi...
The ecological impacts of global change extend through multiple scales affecting individuals, local ...
The effect of climate on tree growth has received increased interest in the context of climate chang...
As the atmosphere warms, precipitation events become larger, but less frequent. Yet, there is fundam...
1. Climate is widely assumed to influence physiological and demographic processes in trees, and henc...
Reprinted from: Monthly Weather Review, Vo. 93, No. 7, Pp. 421 to 443, 1965The relationships between...
Spatial patterns of precipitation in the southwestern United States result in a complex gradient fro...
In recent decades, intense droughts, insect outbreaks, and wildfires have led to decreasing tree gro...
In the early 1900s, tree-ring scientists began analyzing the relative widths of annual growth rings ...
Trees are spectacular things. One reason for their splendor is that they record annual growth data i...
Tree resistance to extreme droughts and post-drought recovery are sensitive to the drought timing. H...
The controls on forest carbon cycling are the focus of much interest, as forests store nearly half o...
In temperate forests, precipitation-productivity relationships have usually been considered linear a...
Several lines of evidence suggest that forest growth in many regions is declining as a consequence o...
Forests play an important role in the earth system, regulating climate, maintaining biodiversity, an...
International audienceThe CONterminous United States (CONUS) presents a large range of climate condi...
The ecological impacts of global change extend through multiple scales affecting individuals, local ...
The effect of climate on tree growth has received increased interest in the context of climate chang...
As the atmosphere warms, precipitation events become larger, but less frequent. Yet, there is fundam...
1. Climate is widely assumed to influence physiological and demographic processes in trees, and henc...
Reprinted from: Monthly Weather Review, Vo. 93, No. 7, Pp. 421 to 443, 1965The relationships between...