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research article

Placing unprecedented recent fir growth in a European-wide and Holocene-long context

Buentgen, Ulf
•
Tegel, Willy
•
Kaplan, Jed O.  
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2014
Frontiers In Ecology And The Environment

Forest decline played a pivotal role in motivating Europe's political focus on sustainability around 35 years ago. Silver fir (Abies alba) exhibited a particularly severe dieback in the mid-1970s, but disentangling biotic from abiotic drivers remained challenging because both spatial and temporal data were lacking. Here, we analyze 14 136 samples from living trees and historical timbers, together with 356 pollen records, to evaluate recent fir growth from a continent-wide and Holocene-long perspective. Land use and climate change influenced forest growth over the past millennium, whereas anthropogenic emissions of acidic sulfates and nitrates became important after about 1850. Pollution control since the 1980s, together with a warmer but not drier climate, has facilitated an unprecedented surge in productivity across Central European fir stands. Restricted fir distribution prior to the Mesolithic and again in the Modern Era, separated by a peak in abundance during the Bronze Age, is indicative of the long-term interplay of changing temperatures, shifts in the hydrological cycle, and human impacts that have shaped forest structure and productivity.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1890/130089
Web of Science ID

WOS:000332047100005

Author(s)
Buentgen, Ulf
Tegel, Willy
Kaplan, Jed O.  
Schaub, Marcus
Hagedorn, Frank
Buergi, Matthias
Brazdil, Rudolf
Helle, Gerhard
Carrer, Marco
Heussner, Karl-Uwe
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Date Issued

2014

Publisher

Ecological Soc Amer

Published in
Frontiers In Ecology And The Environment
Volume

12

Issue

2

Start page

100

End page

106

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ARVE  
Available on Infoscience
May 2, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/103157
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