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Drought effects of annual and long-term temperature and precipitation on mortality risk for 9 common European tree species

Matthias Neumair, Donna P. Ankerst, Nenad Potočić, Volkmar Timmermann, Mladen Ognjenović, Susanne Brandl, Wolfgang Falk
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.10.515913
Matthias Neumair
1School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Germany
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  • For correspondence: m.neumair@tum.de
Donna P. Ankerst
1School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Germany
2Department of Mathematics, Technical University of Munich, Germany
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Nenad Potočić
3Division for Forest Ecology, Croatian Forest Research Institute, Croatia
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Volkmar Timmermann
4Division of Biotechnology and Plant Health, NIBIO Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy, Norway
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Mladen Ognjenović
3Division for Forest Ecology, Croatian Forest Research Institute, Croatia
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Susanne Brandl
5Bavarian State Institute of Forestry, Germany
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Wolfgang Falk
5Bavarian State Institute of Forestry, Germany
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Abstract

Risk factors for natural tree mortality in managed forests, excluding wind and snow induced breakage, fires and thinning, can be difficult to identify due to correlated confounders of long- and short-term weather patterns with tree age. This study quantified the association of annual and long-term 30-year average temperature and precipitation effects on individual tree death across Europe from 2011 to 2020 for European beech, sessile and pedunculate oak, silver birch, black pine, Austrian oak, Scots pine, European hornbeam, and Norway spruce. For each species, logistic regression approaches for predicting annual mortality evaluated the influence of age, exposition and weather effects on individual tree death, while accounting for multi-collinearity of risk factors. For all species except sessile oak, higher 30-year-temperature averages were associated with higher odds of tree mortality. Effect size of other risk factors varied among species, with similar weather associations between Austrian and sessile oak on the one hand, and Scots pine, Norway spruce and pedunculate oak on the other hand. In particular, warmer winters reduced mortality for silver birch, sessile and Austrian oaks, while having the opposite association for the other species. Sessile oak was most robust against drought effects and could serve as an important tree species under climate change scenarios.

  • Individual tree death
  • logistic regression
  • ClimateEU
  • ICP Forests
  • Weather
  • Climate

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted November 11, 2022.
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Drought effects of annual and long-term temperature and precipitation on mortality risk for 9 common European tree species
Matthias Neumair, Donna P. Ankerst, Nenad Potočić, Volkmar Timmermann, Mladen Ognjenović, Susanne Brandl, Wolfgang Falk
bioRxiv 2022.11.10.515913; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.10.515913
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Drought effects of annual and long-term temperature and precipitation on mortality risk for 9 common European tree species
Matthias Neumair, Donna P. Ankerst, Nenad Potočić, Volkmar Timmermann, Mladen Ognjenović, Susanne Brandl, Wolfgang Falk
bioRxiv 2022.11.10.515913; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.10.515913

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