Authors
Stefan Klesse, Robert Justin DeRose, Flurin Babst, Bryan A Black, Leander DL Anderegg, Jodi Axelson, Ailene Ettinger, Hardy Griesbauer, Christopher H Guiterman, Grant Harley, Jill E Harvey, Yueh‐Hsin Lo, Ann M Lynch, Christopher O'Connor, Christina Restaino, Dave Sauchyn, John D Shaw, Dan J Smith, Lisa Wood, Jose Villanueva‐Díaz, Margaret EK Evans
Publication date
2020/9
Journal
Global Change Biology
Volume
26
Issue
9
Pages
5146-5163
Description
A central challenge in global change research is the projection of the future behavior of a system based upon past observations. Tree‐ring data have been used increasingly over the last decade to project tree growth and forest ecosystem vulnerability under future climate conditions. But how can the response of tree growth to past climate variation predict the future, when the future does not look like the past? Space‐for‐time substitution (SFTS) is one way to overcome the problem of extrapolation: the response at a given location in a warmer future is assumed to follow the response at a warmer location today. Here we evaluated an SFTS approach to projecting future growth of Douglas‐fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), a species that occupies an exceptionally large environmental space in North America. We fit a hierarchical mixed‐effects model to capture ring‐width variability in response to spatial and temporal …
Total citations
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