Despite its wide geographic distribution and important role in boreal forest fire regimes, little is known about the climate-growth relationships of black spruce (Picea mariana [Mill.] B.S.P.). We used site- and tree-level analyses to evaluate the radial growth responses to climate of black spruce growing on a north-facing toposequence in interior Alaska for the period A.D. 1949–2010. At the site level, correlations between growth and climate were negative for temperature and positive for precipitation. The signs and strengths of these correlations varied seasonally and over time. These site-level differences probably arise from tree interactions with non-climatic factors that vary with topography and include active layer thickness, soil temperature, solar radiation, microsite, and tree architecture. We infer that black spruce suffers from drought stress during warm, dry summers and that the causes of this moisture stress relate to topography and the seasonality of drought. Tree-level analyses reveal that divergent inter-tree growth responses among individual trees at the same site also occur, with the lower slope positions having the greatest frequency of mixed responses. The overall complexity of black spruce's climate-growth relationships reflects the plastic growth strategy that enables this species to tolerate harsh, high-latitude conditions across a transcontinental range.
Introduction
Boreal forests comprise a third of Earth's forests and occur in regions where climate is now changing rapidly (Wolken et al., 2011a). In interior Alaska, the largely forested region between the Alaska and Brooks Ranges, mean annual temperature has risen 1.4 °C since 1970 (Wendler and Shulski, 2009), and growing season length has increased by three days per decade over the same period (Euskirchen et al., 2010). These changes in climate are affecting tree growth, fire regimes, and the geographic ranges of tree species (Beck et al., 2011; Kelly et al., 2013). Changes in forest composition have the potential to cause strong feedbacks to climate by altering the processes controlling trace gas sequestration and by altering land-surface energy budgets (Mann et al., 2012). To better predict future states of the boreal forest and assess global impacts of changes in forest composition it is essential to know how boreal tree species respond to climate under a variety of site conditions.
Black spruce (Picea maraina [Mill.] B.S.P.) has a transcontinental range spanning boreal North America and is the most abundant tree species in interior Alaska, where it grows in a variety of community types differing in floristic compositions, structures (open vs. closed canopy), soil properties (pH, moisture), altitudes, and slope positions (Hollingsworth et al., 2006). Black spruce is the dominant tree species growing at the cold, wet end of the continuum of soil temperature and moisture conditions present in interior Alaska (Yarie, 1983; Van Cleve et al., 1990).
The presence of black spruce on the landscape is strongly linked to the present-day fire regime of the Alaskan boreal forest (Johnstone et al., 2010). Its resinous foliage and wood, abundant fine branches that afford ladder fuels, and dense stand structure facilitate frequent burning (Hu et al., 1996). Black spruce's pyrogenic qualities led to a striking increase in fire frequency ca. 6000 years ago when this species first became abundant in interior Alaska during the initial stages of neoglacial cooling (Kelly et al., 2013). It follows that if black spruce's growth and distribution on the landscape change in the future, the regional fire regime may also change. Several lines of evidence suggest that the present black spruce—dominated forests in interior Alaska are undergoing changes in structure and composition (Beck et al., 2011; Mann et al., 2012; Kelly et al., 2013; Hollingsworth et al., in press).
Despite the ecological importance of black spruce in the Alaskan boreal forest, the majority of tree-ring studies in interior Alaska have involved white spruce growing near treeline (Lloyd et al., 2005, 2013). Dendrochronological studies in the Canadian boreal forest reveal that cool and wet conditions generally favor the radial growth of black spruce (Brooks et al., 1998; Subedi and Sharma, 2013). Radial growth of this species also correlates strongly with both the current and previous year's climate (Girard et al., 2011), and these relationships can vary along gradients in moisture (Trindade et al., 2011) and in response to site-specific characteristics, such as soil organic-layer thickness (Drobyshev et al., 2010).
Tree growth in the subarctic might be expected to be limited by cool summer temperatures, because temperature is an important factor controlling the latitudinal (Lloyd et al., 2011) and altitudinal (Ettinger et al., 2011) limits of many tree species. Indeed, conifers at treeline in Siberia have responded to recent warming by growing faster and shifting their geographic ranges northward (Lloyd et al., 2011; Berner et al., 2013). However, mounting evidence suggests that some trees in the circumboreal forest are becoming less sensitive to temperature, with the correlation between summer temperature and radial growth switching from positive to negative in recent decades (Briffa et al., 1998; D'Arrigo et al., 2008; Porter and Pisaric, 2011). In some cases, the negative response of white spruce to warming temperature is attributed to water stress replacing temperature as the most immediate factor limiting tree growth (Barber et al., 2000; D'Arrigo et al., 2009; Lloyd et al., 2013).
The decoupling of tree growth from temperature in high-latitude forests has been termed the divergence problem (D'Arrigo et al., 2008). Here we use the term growth-climate divergence because it more precisely describes this phenomenon and includes growth responses to both temperature and precipitation. Although growth-climate divergence is widespread in white spruce, its frequency among black spruce is unknown because the majority of dendrochronological studies in interior Alaska have involved white spruce growing at treeline, where it is the dominant tree species (Viereck, 1979; Lloyd et al., 2005).
Another type of growth divergence emerges when individual trees become the focus of study rather than the mean responses of all trees sampled at a site (Wilmking et al., 2004, 2005; Zhang et al., 2009). In traditional dendrochronology, the mean responses of large numbers of trees are used to reconstruct past climate (Carrer, 2011). While invaluable for climate studies, this approach ignores the fact that individual trees can display varying and sometimes opposing responses to the same climate drivers (Wilmking et al., 2005). Because this form of growth divergence involves differing inter-tree growth responses, here we use the term inter-tree growth divergence for this phenomenon. Previous studies have related inter-tree growth divergence to differences in meso- and microsite conditions including topographic position, soil fertility, soil temperature, and genotypic diversity associated with different aged cohorts (Szeicz and MacDonald, 1994; Wilmking and Juday, 2005; Wilmking and Myers-Smith, 2008). Though well documented in white spruce (Driscoll et al., 2005; Wilmking et al., 2004, 2005) and observed in Alaskan black spruce (Wilmking and Myers-Smith, 2008, Walker and Johnstone, 2014), it is unclear how widespread inter-tree growth divergence is among black spruce growing in interior Alaska.
Here we present a case study evaluating how climate differentially affects the radial growth of black spruce growing along a north-facing toposequence within the boreal forest landscape of interior Alaska. This toposequence incorporates steep gradients in solar radiation, soil drainage, and depth to permafrost. Specifically, we used site- and tree-level scales of study to explore three questions. First, how does topographic position affect the sensitivity of black spruce growth to variations in temperature and precipitation? To address this question we evaluated the radial growth responses to climate variability of black spruce growing at four different topographic locations along the toposequence. We hypothesized that trees at the comparatively well-drained Summit site are more sensitive to precipitation than to temperature compared to trees growing at the Valley bottom site, where soils are perennially moist and soil temperatures remain cold all summer. Second, how have the climate-growth relationships of black spruce changed over time? We hypothesized that the temporal changes in the sensitivity and sign of the site-level responses to different combinations of temperature and precipitation vary with topographic location. And third, do black spruce trees growing at the same site differ in their growth responses to climate? To explore this question regarding inter-tree growth divergence, we evaluated the climate-growth relationships of individual trees growing at the same site. Specifically, we hypothesized that there is a greater diversity of inter-tree growth responses among trees at the Valley bottom versus the Summit site because microtopography tends to be more diverse at cold, moist sites underlain by permafrost than at dry sites lacking permafrost. We proposed that a greater understanding of site- and tree-level characteristics is required in order to develop a more complete picture of the underlying processes driving the growth responses of black spruce to variations in climate.
Methods
Study Area
The toposequence at Babe Creek is located on a steep, north-facing hillslope in the Yukon-Tanana Uplands at 64°59′55″N and 147°39′25″W, approximately 40 km north of Fairbanks, Alaska (Fig. 1). Vegetation is the Wet acidic black spruce subtype within the Acidic black spruce/lichen forest community type described by Hollingsworth et al., (2006). The Wet acidic subtype is characterized by low-nutrient soils and a shallow active layer, which is the uppermost layer of ground that freezes and thaws annually. In interior Alaska, snow accumulates throughout the winter, and although maximum snowpack is shallow, it provides good thermal insulation, as winds are generally calm throughout the winter months (Hinzman et al., 2006). Ground- and shrub-layer vegetation is dominated by ericaceous shrubs and sphagnum mosses (Hollingsworth et al., 2006). The climate of interior Alaska is subarctic and continental, with warm summers and cold winters (Shulski and Wendler, 2007). Even in midsummer, steep gradients in solar insolation exist on this hilly landscape because of the low sun angles at this high latitude.
We sampled black spruce trees at four sites located along the 1-km-long toposequence: Summit, Side slope, Toe slope, and Valley bottom. Besides differing in topographic position and altitude, these sites differ in organic soil depth, active-layer thickness, site moisture, soil temperature at 40–50 cm depth, soil texture, solar radiation received during the snow-free season, and mineral soil pH (Table 1). Soil temperatures recorded at each site between 2004 and 2012 reveal sizable differences in local microclimates (Table 1, Fig. 2). Soils are warmest at the Summit, where the active layer is deepest. Soil temperature at the Summit is 2 to 4 °C warmer than at the other sites in winter and 0.5 to 1.0 °C warmer in summer. Relative to the Summit, soils at the Valley bottom are the coldest of the three lower sites by as much as 0.5 °C in some summers. The Side slope and Toe slope sites are more similar to the Valley bottom than the Summit in terms of soil temperature. Consistent with the trend in soil temperature, active layers thin and solar radiation values decrease downslope of the Summit site.
Tree-Ring Samples
We collected two cores taken 180° apart from 20 trees at each of the four sites at 25–30 cm above the ground to avoid deformities in tree rings located near the root-stem junction. The largest trees were selected for sampling to capture the longest temporal records, as historical studies of black spruce sites in interior Alaska indicate that the legacy effects of fire on stand structure result in the largest trees being the oldest (Hollingsworth et al., 2006, in press). Cross-sectional disks were collected from an additional six trees in the Valley bottom because the trees at this site were especially difficult to cross-date using cores. In the laboratory, tree cores and disks were mounted, sanded until individual xylem cells could be clearly distinguished under a stereomicroscope, and then measured to the nearest 0.001 mm using a Velmex TA unislide system (Velmex Inc., Bloomfield, New York) and Measure J2X software (VoorTech Consulting, Holderness, New Hampshire). The cores were first cross-dated visually and then statistically using the program COFECHA (Grissino-Mayer, 2001). At all four sites, 1969 was identified as a marker year, which corresponds to the occurrence of a widespread drought in interior Alaska (Xiao and Zhuang, 2007), when >1.6 million hectares burned in the region (Todd and Jewkes, 2006). Ring-width index (RWI) was deemed the response variable of choice rather than basal area increment (BAI), because our research questions did not involve a comparison of the absolute growth rates. We opted to conservatively detrend each ring-width series with either a negative exponential curve, a line of negative slope, or a horizontal line to remove the geometric growth trend using the dplR package (Bunn, 2008; Lloyd et al., 2011; Salzer et al., 2014) because we were interested in determining the growth responses (i.e., climate sensitivity) of black spruce to climate variability at both the site- and tree-level. This detrending strategy preserves the low-frequency (multi-decadal) trends in the ring-width data. The two detrended ring-width series from each tree were averaged to create the individual tree-level chronologies.
TABLE 1
Site characteristics of Babe Creek black spruce toposequence.
We developed site-level chronologies (Table 2) by averaging the tree-level chronologies from each site. The detrendeR package in the statistical program R was used to calculate the expressed population signal (EPS), which is a measure of the common variability in a chronology. We calculated the running EPS within a 50-year window for the period A.D. 1949–2010 that was used to classify the site- and tree-level responses (see Analysis of Climate-Growth Relationships below) because of the varying length of the chronologies (Table 2) and the low sample depths in the early part of the series. Although the EPS values (Table 2) for the Side slope (mean EPS = 0.77) and Valley bottom (mean EPS = 0.59) do not exceed the recommended 0.85 threshold to be considered a reliable and consistent signal (Wigley et al., 1984), we opted to evaluate the site- and tree-level climate-growth relationships of these sites anyway, since changing climate-growth relationships and inter-tree growth divergence within a site could themselves be the reason for the low EPS values.
TABLE 2
Summary of site-level chronologies.
Analysis of Climate-Growth Relationships
To evaluate the climate-growth relationships of black spruce through time, we analyzed a 50-year moving interval analysis (i.e., 50 years of radial growth correlated with 50 years of mean monthly temperature [MMT] and 50 years of total monthly precipitation [TMP] data) for the period A.D. 1949–2010 using the program DENDROCLIM2002. This computer program uses 1000 bootstrapped samples to compute correlation coefficients for each 50-year interval (i.e., first interval 1949–1999, second interval 1950–2000, etc.) and assesses significance at p < 0.05 (Biondi and Waikul, 2004). We correlated site-level chronologies with climate records from the Fairbanks Station, a first-order weather station located at the Fairbanks International Airport. The same climate data has been used previously in dendrochronological reconstructions in interior Alaska, and it is highly correlated with growth patterns in upland white spruce (Barber et al., 2000; Juday and Alix, 2012; Juday et al., 2015). Since our black spruce chronologies have limited temporal depths in the early part of the series, we limited the climate-growth analysis to the period A.D. 1949–2010. We selected an 18-month climate window (18 months of temperature data and 18 months of precipitation data) because the radial growth of black spruce has been correlated with climate variables from both the previous and current year (Girard et al., 2011; Trindade et al., 2011). The 50-year moving interval analysis correlated 50 years of radial growth at each site in year t with MMT and total TMP for the period from April of year t-1 to September of year t for the period A.D. 1949–2010. Following Lloyd et al. (2011), we classified each site's response to MMT for the period A.D. 1949–2010 (because of the low sample depths in the early part of the site-level chronologies) into one of four response-types based on the number of positive, negative, or non-significant correlation values determined by DENDROCLIM2002 for all year and monthly combinations. These four response-types are: positive (“+”: >67% of significant correlations with temperature are positive), negative (“-”: >67% of significant correlations with temperature are negative), mixed (“m”: between 33% and 67% of significant correlations with temperature are positive), or none (no significant correlations with temperature). This method of categorizing each site into response-types for MMT was then repeated for correlations between radial growth and TMP. We made qualitative comparisons between different sites along the toposequence by evaluating the significance and direction of the DENDROCLIM2002 results.
To evaluate the climate-growth relationships of individual trees within each site, we correlated individual tree-level chronologies with MMT and TMP using the 50-year moving interval analysis described above. The 50-year moving interval correlations between each tree's radial growth and climate (both MMT and TMP) were then categorized into one of the four response-types described above. For consistency with the site-level classification of responses, we limited the tree-level analyses to the period A.D. 1949–2010. We then determined the percentage of trees at each site exhibiting each temperature-precipitation response-type combination (e.g., +Temperature and +Precipitation (+T+P), -Temperature and +Precipitation (-T+P)). Within- and between-site comparisons were made qualitatively by evaluating the percentage of trees exhibiting each response-type combination. A rigorous statistical analysis of the multivariate inter-tree growth responses to temperature and precipitation was not deemed appropriate because the number of trees sampled at each site was relatively small.
Results
Site-Based Variations in Climate Sensitivity
The black spruce chronologies we studied are 100 to 155 years long (Table 2; Fig. 3). The youngest trees grow at the Summit site and established there between A.D. 1908 and 1940. The oldest sample trees grow in the lower slope positions where they established between A.D. 1857 and 1943. Although two cores were collected from 20 trees at each site, the number of sample trees that we were able to successfully cross-date varied by site.
At the site-level, the overall sensitivity of black spruce growth to climate for the period A.D. 1949–2010 at all four sites was negative for temperature and positive for precipitation (Fig. 4). Trees growing at different sites along the toposequence varied in their sensitivity to the seasonality of climate (Fig. 4). At the Summit, tree growth was positively correlated with temperatures in December of the previous year and negatively correlated with temperature in April and May of the current year (Fig. 4, part a). Precipitation in April of the current year and in August of both the previous and current years was positively correlated with growth at the Summit (Fig. 4, part a). The Side slope climate-growth relationships resemble the Summit more than the lower slope sites, where temperature in April and May of the current year was negatively correlated with tree growth and where correlations with precipitation in August of the previous year were positive (Fig. 4, part b). At the Toe slope, tree growth throughout the growing season in both the previous and current years was negatively correlated with temperature, while correlations between growth and August precipitation in both the previous and current years were positive (Fig. 4, part c). At the Valley bottom, tree growth throughout the growing season in both the previous and current years was negatively correlated with temperature, and positively correlated with July precipitation in both the previous and current years (Fig. 4, part d).
Changing Climate-Growth Relationships over Time
The climate-growth relationships of black spruce trees varied through time in patterns seemingly correlated with topographic position. At the Summit, significant positive correlations with temperature in December of the current year have diminished during the past decade, as have significant positive correlations with precipitation in April and August of the current year (Fig. 4, part a). At the Side slope, significant positive correlations with September precipitation of the previous and current years have disappeared in recent decades (Fig. 4, part b). At the Toe slope, significant correlations with April temperature in both the previous and current years remained strong throughout the past two decades (Fig. 4, part c). In contrast, significant negative correlations with spring and growing season (May–September) temperatures in both the previous and current years have diminished in the last decade at the Valley bottom at the same time that significant positive correlations with precipitation in July of the previous and current years, and September of the current year have developed there (Fig. 4, part d).
Inter-tree Growth Responses to Climate among Individual Trees
The climate-growth relationships (A.D. 1949–2010) of individual trees were not homogeneous. Examination of the tree-level climate-growth relationships revealed that trees at each site varied widely in their growth responses to climate (Fig. 5). Although the majority of trees at all four sites were negatively correlated with temperature (Fig. 5, part a) and positively correlated with precipitation (Fig. 5, part b), negative responses to temperature increased downslope, and positive responses to precipitation tended to increase upslope. Hence, although the -T+P multivariate response-type was common at all four sites, the percentage of trees exhibiting this particular growth response varied with topographic position (Fig. 5, part c). At the Summit, 59% of sampled trees were -T+P responders, whereas 35% were +T+P responders. At the Side slope, the two dominant response-types occurred in similar proportions, with 27% of trees being +T+P responders and 27% of trees being -TmP responders. Climate responses were particularly diverse among trees growing at the Toe slope and Valley bottom sites, where mixed responses to precipitation were more frequent than at the Summit and Side slope (Fig. 5, part c). At the Toe slope, the dominant response-type was -TmP (39%), whereas at the Valley bottom the two dominant response-types occurred in similar proportions, with 25% of trees being +T-P responders and 25% of trees being -TmP.
Discussion
Our findings along the Babe Creek toposequence demonstrate that the climate-growth relationships of black spruce vary widely across topography, over time, and among individual trees within a site, and that both growth-climate divergence and inter-tree growth divergence are common occurrences. Collectively, site- and tree-level climate-growth relationships provide complimentary information describing the climate sensitivity of Alaska's most abundant tree species.
Varying Sensitivity of Growth to Climate with Topography
These results complement dendrochronological studies elsewhere in the boreal forest that indicate the growth of black spruce is favored by cold and wet conditions (Brooks et al., 1998; Subedi and Sharma, 2013; Walker and Johnstone, 2014). In contrast, the growth of black spruce at treeline in the Brooks Range is limited by cool summer temperatures (Lloyd et al., 2005).
The site-level differences we observed in the growth responses of black spruce to climate are probably responses to differences in non-climatic factors such as hydrology, active layer thickness, soil temperature, and incoming solar radiation. All these factors vary according to topographic position (Fig. 6), as site moisture is largely determined by topographic drainage, which in turn is controlled by permafrost (i.e., soil temperature and active layer thickness) and soil texture (Johnstone et al., 2008). For instance, the Valley bottom site has the wettest soils because it intercepts water moving downslope, which facilitates the rapid growth of mosses, which in combination with topographic shading and cold-air drainage creates the coldest soils with the thinnest active layers anywhere along the toposequence (Table 1). Cold soil temperatures and shallow active layers at both the Toe slope and Valley bottom probably restrict rooting depth to the top 20 cm of the soil profile (Van Cleve et al., 1983) and inhibit root growth (Ruess et al., 2003), which in turn may slow rates of water uptake (Wolken et al., 2011b) as well as lead to more rapid paludification during post-fire succession (Crawford et al., 2003).
Do Topography and Tree Architecture Interact to Determine Growth Responses to Climate?
Tree architecture differs markedly along the toposequence at Babe Creek (Fig. 7), and we speculate these differences may contribute to the observed variations in the growth responses to climate. By tree architecture we mean the integrated structure of root and shoot anatomy incorporating all elements of vascular systems, support structures, and canopy arrays. This architecture is the product of the climate, microsite, and disturbance history that a tree has experienced over the course of its life (Pereg and Payette, 1998). It reflects the physiological stresses experienced in the past and partly determines how a tree responds to these stresses in the future.
Although the following studies document the phenotypic plasticity of black spruce, dendro-architectural studies of the above- and belowground growth of black spruce at the northwestern extreme of its range in Alaska are non-existent. Significant architectural differences have been previously shown in black spruce in Interior Alaska, with more carbon being allocated to roots at lowland sites underlain by permafrost than at upland permafrost-free sites (Noguchi et al., 2012). In northern Manitoba, black spruce growing on discontinuous permafrost have greater total above- and belowground biomass than trees at wet sites (Wang et al., 2003). In the Québec subarctic, the aboveground growth and growth form of black spruce are strongly influenced by defoliation events that include both growing season frost events and mechanical defoliation caused by snow and ice abrasion (Payette et al., 1996). In a greenhouse study, black spruce established and grown at warmer air temperatures were shorter and also allocated more carbon to aboveground growth than to root growth than did trees grown under cooler conditions (Way and Sage, 2008). Decreased allocation of carbon to root growth can increase the susceptibility of trees to drought stress under a regime of periodic soil drying and thus decrease competitiveness for soil nutrients (Way and Sage, 2008). Pairing tree-ring studies with architectural studies similar to those described above may greatly expand our understanding of the processes by which black spruce modulates its growth in response to climate variability.
What Causes Black Spruce's Negative Growth Responses to Warm Spring and Growing Season Temperatures?
Trees at all four topographic locations generally responded negatively to warmer temperatures and positively to increased precipitation (Figs. 4 and 5). These negative responses to temperature are probably the result of reduced photosynthesis caused by water stress. This is the explanation given in previous studies for the negative effect of above average spring and summer temperatures on the radial growth of black spruce (Walker and Johnstone, 2014) and white spruce (Beck et al., 2011; Juday and Alix, 2012; Lloyd et al., 2013) in interior Alaska. In the case of white spruce, the occurrence of water stress is less surprising because this species can be found growing at the warmest, driest sites in the region. In contrast, black spruce can grow at the coldest, wettest sites including the north-facing toposequence at Babe Creek.
We speculate that two different mechanisms create drought stress in black spruce trees at Babe Creek and that their importance depends on topographic position. The first mechanism is well documented in non-permafrost terrain and occurs when evapotranspiration outstrips the supply of soil moisture during periods of drought accentuated by above-average summer temperatures. This first mechanism is probably the most frequent cause of drought-induced reductions in growth at the relatively warm and well-drained Summit site where trees respond positively to increased precipitation in the spring and in late summer of both the previous and current year (Fig. 4, part a).
A second mechanism of drought stress may occur at the Toe slope and Valley bottom sites where cold, wet, and poorly aerated soils may cause water loss via transpiration to exceed the capacity of the roots to uptake water (Dang et al., 1991). Possible evidence for this rhizosphere-mediated drought stress at Babe Creek may be the downslope decline in the responsiveness of trees to enhanced summer precipitation and the downslope increase in negative responses to warm growing seasons (Fig. 5). Although soil water is not in short supply at these lower slope positions, physiological limitations on the uptake of this water may inhibit the growth of black spruce when air temperatures are unusually warm. Further evidence for the occurrence of drought stress arising in poorly aerated, cold soils comes from the negative response of tree growth to warm spring temperatures in the current year at all four sites (Fig. 4). Lloyd et al. (2013) observed similar negative growth responses of white spruce to warm air temperatures in March and April, which they attributed to drought stress caused by limitations on water uptake through roots in cold soils. This same phenomenon may explain the finding of Walker et al. (2015) that black spruce trees growing on north-facing slopes are more moisture limited than trees growing on south-facing slopes.
Changing Climate-Growth Relationships over Time
The climate-growth relationships of black spruce trees at Babe Creek have changed over time, varying with topographic position (Fig. 4). The complexity in these relationships may be compounded by interactions between environmental/ecological characteristics unique to each site (Table 1; Fig. 6), such as active layer thickness, soil temperature (Fig. 2), solar radiation, and tree architecture occurring at the site- and tree-level. Snow depth and duration would also influence these relationships, as this north-facing toposequence would be snow covered for one to two weeks longer than south-facing slopes (Hinzman et al., 2006). Regional scale variables (e.g., May–September mean monthly temperatures) may further complicate these relationships.
Inter-tree Growth Responses to Climate among Individual Trees
Although many high-frequency, year-to-year responses to climate are shared among the trees we studied, the long-wavelength growth trends manifested at decadal time scales differed (see Pisaric et al., 2007). Accordingly, although there was a dominant response-type at each site, there was also considerable variability in the proportion of trees exhibiting each response-type (Fig. 5). We attribute our ability to cross-date trees within sites, despite the fact that individual trees displayed a variety of multivariate response-types, to the fact that cross-dating relies on the high-frequency responses of individual trees to annual and intra-annual variations in climate (Grissino-Mayer, 2001). These high-frequency responses are shared among most trees even though these same trees may be exhibiting divergent, low-frequency trajectories in their growth responses to climate.
Variability in inter-tree growth responses tends to be greater in lower slope positions at Babe Creek, with trees at the Side slope, Toe slope, and Valley bottom possessing more mixed responses to temperature and precipitation than trees at the Summit (Fig. 5, part c). A possible explanation for why response-type diversity increases downslope includes an increase in microtopographic variation (Fig. 6), which Wilmking and Myers-Smith (2008) suggested is an important factor in determining inter-tree growth responses among black spruce to climate. Even though black spruce can grow in cold, wet soils, it is sensitive to slight variations in soil moisture (Wolken et al., 2011b). At the Valley bottom, hummock and hollow topography has been created by a combination of frost heaving and the localized accumulation of Sphagnum-peat hummocks. These hummocks and hollows, together with patches of aufeis (overflow ice) and occasional palsas (frost mounds), create a wider range of substrate conditions than are present in higher slope positions.
Evidence of Both Types of Growth Divergence
Black spruce trees at Babe Creek exhibit both inter-tree growth divergence and growth-climate divergence. The former is well illustrated by the high frequency of mixed growth responses to climate at the Toe slope and Valley bottom (Fig. 5, part c). Growth-climate divergence is evident in the changing signs and strengths of correlations between tree growth and temperature/precipitation over the life span of individual trees (Fig. 4). Clearly, divergence phenomena are characteristic of black spruce growing along this toposequence and probably occur throughout the range of this species. This interesting complexity may be one reason why dendrochronologists have tended to avoid using black spruce to construct climate-proxy records. It remains to be seen whether general patterns in black spruce's response to climate variability will emerge after accounting for site conditions, tree age, and tree architecture.
Conclusions
Simply identifying drought stress as the main climatic control over black spruce growth fails to reveal the full complexity of black spruce's responses to climate variability within the topographically complex, permafrost landscapes of interior Alaska. In this case study, the sensitivity of black spruce growth to climate varies over short distances in response to topography (Fig. 4) and differs strikingly among trees growing at the same sites (Fig. 5). This inter-tree growth divergence is especially pronounced at the coldest, wettest sites. We speculate that the cause of the differing climate-growth relationships relates to microsite variability and architectural differences between individual trees, which in turn reflect the highly plastic growth strategy that enables black spruce to exist in some of the most extreme settings for tree growth.
Our results also illustrate that even at the coldest, wettest sites in the boreal forest of interior Alaska, site moisture may limit the growth of black spruce (Figs. 4 and 5). The causes of this moisture stress relate to topography and the seasonality of climate. With continued warming, this moisture-mediated sensitivity to warm temperatures may eventually inhibit black spruce productivity (Walker and Johnstone, 2014) and thus contribute yet another mechanism to the ecological regime shift predicted for the interior Alaskan boreal forest (Beck et al., 2011; Mann et al., 2012; Kelly et al., 2013).
Acknowledgments
We thank Tom Kurkowski for creating maps; Angelica Floyd, Matt Leonawicz, and Michael Lindgren for assistance with figures; Sergey Marchenko for providing soil temperature data; Glenn Juday for providing climate data and laboratory equipment; David Spencer for assistance with COFECHA; and Claire Hudson, Carson Baughman, and Pamela Groves for assistance with field work. Funding was provided by a National Science Foundation grant (ARC-0902169), the Scenarios Network for Alaska and Arctic Planning, the Bonanza Creek LTER NSF awards (DEB-1026415, DEB-0620579, DEB-0423442, DEB-0080609, DEB-9810217, DEB-9211769, DEB-8702629), the USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station (Cooperative Agreement number RJVA-PNW-01-JV-11261952-231), and the Alaska Climate Science Center (Cooperative Agreement number G10AC00588 from the U.S. Geological Survey [USGS]). The contents of this paper are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the USGS.