Decreasing stand density favors resistance, resilience, and recovery of Quercus petraea trees to a severe drought, particularly on dry sites

Archive ouverte

Schmitt, Anna | Trouvé, Raphaël | Seynave, Ingrid | Lebourgeois, François, F.

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Nature (since 2011)/EDP Science (until 2010) -

International audience. Key message Decreasing stand density increases resistance, resilience, and recovery ofQuercus petraeatrees to severe drought (2003), particularly on dry sites, and the effect was independent of tree social status. Context Controlling competition is an advocated strategy to modulate the response of trees to predicted changes in climate. Aims We investigated the effects of stand density (low, medium, high; relative density index 0.20, 0.53, 1.04), social status (dominant, codominant, suppressed), and water balance (dry, mesic, wet; summer water balance - 182, - 126, - 96 mm) on the climate-growth relationships (1997-2012) and resistance (Rt), resilience (Rs), and recovery (Rc) following the 2003 drought. Methods Basal area increments were collected by coring (269 trees) in young stands (28 +/- 7.5 years in 2012) of sessile oak (Quercus petraea) in a French permanent network of silvicultural plots. Results We showed that the climate-growth relationships depend on average site-level water balance with trees highly dependent on spring and summer droughts on dry and mesic sites and not at all on wet sites. Neither stand density nor social status modulated mean response to climate. Decreasing stand density increased Rt, Rs, and Rc particularly on dry sites. The effect was independent of tree social position within the stand. Conclusion Reducing stand density mitigates more the effect of extreme drought events on drier sites than on wet sites.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Stand density, tree social status and water stress influence allocation in height and diameter growth of Quercus petraea (Liebl.)

Archive ouverte | Trouvé, Raphaël | CCSD

Even-aged forest stands are competitive communities where competition for light gives advantages to tall individuals, thereby inducing a race for height. These same individuals must however balance this competitive advantage with ...

When do dendrometric rules fail? Insights from 20 years of experimental thinnings on sessile oak in the GIS Coop network. When do dendrometric rules fail? Insights from 20 years of experimental thinnings on sessile oak in the GIS Coop network: When do dendrometric rules fail? Insights from 20 years of experimental thinnings on sessile oak in the GIS Coop network

Archive ouverte | Trouvé, Raphaël | CCSD

Context Lowering stand density has been suggested to adapt forests to warmer and drier conditions. Whether common dendrometric rules used to guide growth models and support silviculture are still valid at these densities lower tha...

Growth partitioning in forest stands is affected by stand density and summer drought in sessile oak and Douglas-fir

Archive ouverte | Trouvé, Raphaël | CCSD

Context: Growth partitioning among trees in forest stands is pivotal to silviculture, making it crucial to understand its control by factors such as stand development, stand density, or thinning. Since growth partitioning primaril...

Chargement des enrichissements...