Pattern & Process of Tree Mortality Waves in the Mountains of the Southwestern United States [Alison...

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Pattern & Process of Tree Mortality Waves in the Mountains of the Southwestern United States Alison Macalady 1 & Harald Bugmann 2,1 1 Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona 2 Forest Ecology, ETH Zürich, Switzerland Photo: Craig Allen

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Pattern & Process of Tree Mortality Waves in the Mountains of the Southwestern United States. Presented by Alison Macalady at the "Perth II: Global Change and the World's Mountains" conference in Perth, Scotland in September 2010.

Transcript of Pattern & Process of Tree Mortality Waves in the Mountains of the Southwestern United States [Alison...

Page 1: Pattern & Process of Tree Mortality Waves in the Mountains of the Southwestern United States [Alison Macalady]

Pattern & Process of Tree

Mortality Waves in the

Mountains of the Southwestern

United States

Alison Macalady1 & Harald Bugmann2,1

1 Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona

2 Forest Ecology, ETH Zürich, Switzerland

Photo: Craig Allen

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Photo: Craig Allen

Page 3: Pattern & Process of Tree Mortality Waves in the Mountains of the Southwestern United States [Alison Macalady]

Allen and Breshears (1998), PNAS

Mortality in the 1950s and 2000s

Breshears et al. (2005), PNAS

1950s 2000s

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Mortality mechanisms

McDowell et al. (2008), New Phyto

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Index based on radial growth

1

0

Mortality

Probability ?

CCR >80%, (e.g. Bigler & Bugmann 2004, Ecol Appl)

– growth level over past few years

– growth trend over past years to decades

– growth sensitivity

Growth-mortality models

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Research questions

Can the probability of piñon

mortality under drought be

accurately modeled using

indices derived from diameter

growth?

What do growth-mortality

models reveal about the

drivers of tree mortality

through space and time?

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Field sites

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Sampling design

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Tree growth – typical patterns

SEV 2000s Low growth

before death Large

release/recovery

of L trees!

TRP 2000s Divergence of L

and D trees

incited by 1950s

drought

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Internal validation: 60% fitting, 40% testing

500 simulations

Fitting mortality models: one site

Sevilleta, 1950s

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Fitting mortality models: all sites

Site/period Variable AU ROC CCR

SEV 1950s mean

sensitivity 50 0.89 78.7%

BNM 1950s mean

sensitivity 25 0.92 82.0%

SEV 2000s recent

growth 3 0.83 75.3%

BNM 2000s – – –

TRP 2000s growth

difference 15 0.67 59.6%

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Validating mortality models

52.5 55.9 53.4 TRP 2000s

14.3 16.7 31.6 BNM 2000s

Calibration data [shown is CCR]

60.0

77.4

SEV 2000s

61.7 55.9 SEV 2000s

– 77.4 BNM 1950s

73.1 – SEV 1950s

BNM 1950s SEV 1950s Validation

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High model accuracies associated with 1950’s and SEV

2000’s data reflect a chronic stress signal associated with

mortality risk •Best predictors reflect the resource status of the trees over

different time periods.

•Supports carbon starvation mechanism of mortality

What’s going on?

Lack of fit in N 2000’s models suggests other processes. •Acute drought stress

•Increased temps driving accelerated bark beetle/fungi dynamics?

•Carbon allocation to defensive compounds (Kane and Kolb 2010,

Oikos)?

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Strong influence of acute

drought stress and/or bark

beetle/fungi dynamics at

northern sites in the 2000’s

Differences in space and time

an early indicator of global

change?

Challenges of predicting

mortality under drought

Conclusions

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Acknowledgements… Acknowledgements

Craig Allen, Julio Betancourt, Tom Swetnam, Dave Breshears,

Kay Beeley, Collin Haffey, Greg Pederson, Derek Murrow, Chris

Baisan, Rex Adams, Alex Arizpe, Christof Bigler

Financial support

Science Foundation Arizona, US DOE GREF (AM)

ETH Zürich, UA Lab. Tree-Ring Research, Haury Fellowship

(HB)