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Chilling and forcing temperatures interact to predict the onset of wood formation in Northern Hemisphere conifers
Authors:Nicolas Delpierre,S  gol  ne Lireux,Florian Hartig,Jesus Julio Camarero,Alissar Cheaib,Katarina   ufar,Henri Cuny,Annie Deslauriers,Patrick Fonti,Jo  ica Gri   ar,Jian‐Guo Huang,Cornelia Krause,Guohua Liu,Martin de Luis,Harri M  kinen,Edurne Martinez del Castillo,Hubert Morin,Pekka N  jd,Walter Oberhuber,Peter Prislan,Sergio Rossi,Seyedeh Masoumeh Saderi,Vaclav Treml,Hanus Vavrick,Cyrille B. K. Rathgeber
Affiliation:Nicolas Delpierre,Ségolène Lireux,Florian Hartig,Jesus Julio Camarero,Alissar Cheaib,Katarina Čufar,Henri Cuny,Annie Deslauriers,Patrick Fonti,Jožica Gričar,Jian‐Guo Huang,Cornelia Krause,Guohua Liu,Martin de Luis,Harri Mäkinen,Edurne Martinez del Castillo,Hubert Morin,Pekka Nöjd,Walter Oberhuber,Peter Prislan,Sergio Rossi,Seyedeh Masoumeh Saderi,Vaclav Treml,Hanus Vavrick,Cyrille B. K. Rathgeber
Abstract:The phenology of wood formation is a critical process to consider for predicting how trees from the temperate and boreal zones may react to climate change. Compared to leaf phenology, however, the determinism of wood phenology is still poorly known. Here, we compared for the first time three alternative ecophysiological model classes (threshold models, heat‐sum models and chilling‐influenced heat‐sum models) and an empirical model in their ability to predict the starting date of xylem cell enlargement in spring, for four major Northern Hemisphere conifers (Larix decidua, Pinus sylvestris, Picea abies and Picea mariana). We fitted models with Bayesian inference to wood phenological data collected for 220 site‐years over Europe and Canada. The chilling‐influenced heat‐sum model received most support for all the four studied species, predicting validation data with a 7.7‐day error, which is within one day of the observed data resolution. We conclude that both chilling and forcing temperatures determine the onset of wood formation in Northern Hemisphere conifers. Importantly, the chilling‐influenced heat‐sum model showed virtually no spatial bias whichever the species, despite the large environmental gradients considered. This suggests that the spring onset of wood formation is far less affected by local adaptation than by environmentally driven plasticity. In a context of climate change, we therefore expect rising winter–spring temperature to exert ambivalent effects on the spring onset of wood formation, tending to hasten it through the accumulation of forcing temperature, but imposing a higher forcing temperature requirement through the lower accumulation of chilling.
Keywords:cambium  chilling temperatures  conifers  forcing temperatures  phenological models  wood phenology
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