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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Article . 2013 . Peer-reviewed
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Warming-induced upslope advance of subalpine forest is severely limited by geomorphic processes

Authors: Macias-Fauria, M; Johnson, EA;

Warming-induced upslope advance of subalpine forest is severely limited by geomorphic processes

Abstract

Forests are expected to expand into alpine areas because of climate warming, causing land-cover change and fragmentation of alpine habitats. However, this expansion will only occur if the present upper treeline is limited by low-growing season temperatures that reduce plant growth. This temperature limitation has not been quantified at a landscape scale. Here, we show that temperature alone cannot realistically explain high-elevation tree cover over a >100-km 2 area in the Canadian Rockies and that geologic/geomorphic processes are fundamental to understanding the heterogeneous landscape distribution of trees. Furthermore, upslope tree advance in a warmer scenario will be severely limited by availability of sites with adequate geomorphic/topographic characteristics. Our results imply that landscape-to-regional scale projections of warming-induced, high-elevation forest advance into alpine areas should not be based solely on temperature-sensitive, site-specific upper-treeline studies but also on geomorphic processes that control tree occurrence at long (centuries/millennia) timescales.

Country
United Kingdom
Keywords

ecosystem, geology, Canada, seasons, Ecology, Geography, Climate, Climate Change, canada, Temperature, temperature, Geology, trees, Models, Theoretical, models, theoretical, geography, Trees, climate change, Seasons, ecology, climate, SBTMR, Ecosystem

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