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Tree growth in the aftermath of A flood: A tree-ring based reconstruction of the impacts of the 1996-Biescas catastrophe
Institution:1. Institut de Géographie Alpine, Laboratoire Politique publiques, Action Politique, Territoire (PACTE) UMR 5194 du CNRS, Université Joseph Fourier, 14 bis avenue Marie Reynoard, 38100 Grenoble, France;2. Institut national de Recherche en Sciences et Technologies pour l''Environnement et l''Agriculture (IRSTEA), UR EMGR, 38402 St-Martin-d''Hères cedex, France;3. UMR6042 Geolab, Université Blaise Pascal, 4 rue Ledru, F-63057 Clermont-Ferrand, France;5. Section of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Geneva, rue des Maraîchers 13, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland;6. Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Geneva, 7 route de Drize, CH-1227 Carouge, Geneva, Switzerland;1. College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China;2. Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721, USA;3. Department of Geography, University of Exeter, Amory Building, Rennes Drive, Exeter, EX 4 4RJ, UK;4. School of Geography and Ocean Science, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, China
Abstract:Catastrophic floods and large debris flows are natural hazards common in mountain areas. They cause injuries and impact the radial growth of trees growing in the affected basins. Reconstructing how these catastrophic events impact trees by using dendrochronology improves our understanding of natural hazards. The 1996-Biescas (Central Spanish Pyrenees) flood was a catastrophic event causing the loss of many lives in a campsite located on an active alluvial fan. We investigated using tree rings how this catastrophic flood impacted planted trees (poplars, cedars) located in the campsite. Conspicuous scars in the stem were more abundant in cedar trees (75 %) than in poplar (36 %) trees. Scarred cedar trees formed traumatic resin ducts after the flood. In cedar tree perimeter influenced the size of the wound formed after the flood, but this was not observed in poplar. On average, 63 % of trees showing scars formed them in the side of the stem (N-NW) where the impact of the flood was assumed to be strongest. We also detected sharp reductions of tree-ring width after the flood (–56 % and –16 % in poplar and cedar, respectively). However, this was not found when using basal area increment, which suggests there was an age effect on the post-flood growth changes. The two species mean chronologies were also more coupled after the flood in agreement with an increased responsiveness to climate, particularly a higher dependence of growth on June precipitation. To adequately reconstruct responses to flood and to assess the actual vulnerability of forests to debris flow impacts tree features such as species, age, growth rate and responsiveness to climate must be considered.
Keywords:Dendrogeomorpholoy  Flash flood  Natural hazard  Pyrenees
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