Publication details

Site-specific climatic signals in stable isotope records from Swedish pine forests

Authors

ESPER Jan HOLZKAMPER Steffen BÜNTGEN Ulf SCHONE Bernd KEPPLER Frank HARTL Claudia ST. GEORGE Scott RIECHELMANN Dana F. C. TREYDTE Kerstin

Year of publication 2018
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Trees - Structure and function
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00468-018-1678-z
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00468-018-1678-z
Keywords delta C-13; delta O-18; Pinus sylvestris L.; Microsite; Dendrochronology; Sweden
Description Pinus sylvestris tree-ring delta C-13 and delta O-18 records from locally moist sites in central and northern Sweden contain consistently stronger climate signals than their dry site counterparts. We produced twentieth century stable isotope data from Pinus sylvestris trees near lakeshores and inland sites in northern Sweden (near Kiruna) and central Sweden (near Stockholm) to evaluate the influence of changing microsite conditions on the climate sensitivity of tree-ring delta C-13 and delta O-18. The data reveal a latitudinal trend towards lower C and O isotope values near the Arctic tree line (-0.8 parts per thousand for delta C-13 and - 2.4 parts per thousand for delta O-18 relative to central Sweden) reflecting widely recognized atmospheric changes. At the microsite scale, delta C-13 decreases from the dry inland to the moist lakeshore sites (- 0.7 parts per thousand in Kiruna and - 1.2 parts per thousand in Stockholm), evidence of the importance of groundwater access to this proxy. While all isotope records from northern and central Sweden correlate significantly against temperature, precipitation, cloud cover and/or drought data, climate signals in the records from moist microsites are consistently stronger, which emphasizes the importance of site selection when producing stable isotope chronologies. Overall strongest correlations are found with summer temperature, except for delta O-18 from Stockholm correlating best with instrumental drought indices. These findings are complemented by significant positive correlations with temperature-sensitive ring width data in Kiruna, and inverse (or absent) correlations with precipitation-sensitive ring width data in Stockholm. A conclusive differentiation between leading and co-varying forcings is challenging based on only the calibration against often defective instrumental climate data, and would require an improved understanding of the physiological processes that control isotope fractionation at varying microsites and joined application of forward modelling.

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