Trees tell of past climates: but are they speaking less clearly today?

被引:184
作者
Briffa, KR [1 ]
Schweingruber, FH
Jones, PD
Osborn, TJ
Harris, IC
Shiyatov, SG
Vaganov, EA
Grudd, H
机构
[1] Univ E Anglia, Climat Res Unit, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England
[2] Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland
[3] Russian Acad Sci, Inst Plant & Anim Ecol, Ural Branch, Ekaterinburg 620219, Russia
[4] Russian Acad Sci, Inst Forest, Siberian Branch, Krasnoyarsk 660036, Russia
[5] Stockholm Univ, Nat Geog Inst, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden
关键词
tree rings; climate change; volcanoes; tree biomass; fertilization;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.1998.0191
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The annual growth of trees, as represented by a variety of ring-width, densitometric, or chemical parameters, represents a combined record of different environmental forcings, one of which is climate. Along with climate, relatively large-scale positive growth influences such as hypothesized 'fertilization' due to increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide or various nitrogenous compounds, or possibly deleterious effects of 'acid rain' or increased ultra-violet radiation, might all be expected to exert some influence on recent tree growth rates. Inferring the details of past climate variability from tree-ring data remains a largely empirical exercise, but one that goes hand-in-hand with the development of techniques that seek to identify and isolate the confounding influence of local and larger-scale non-climatic factors. By judicious sampling, and the use of rigorous statistical procedures, dendroclimatology has provided unique insight into the nature of past climate variability, but most significantly at interannual, decadal, and centennial time-scales. Here, examples are shown that illustrate the reconstruction of annually resolved patterns of past summer temperature around the Northern Hemisphere, as well as some more localized reconstructions, but ones which span 1000 years or more. These data provide the means of exploring the possible role of different climate forcings; for example, they provide evidence of the large-scale effects of explosive volcanic eruptions on regional and hemispheric temperatures during the last 400 years. However, a dramatic change in the sensitivity of hemispheric tree-growth to temperature forcing has become apparent during recent decades, and there is additional evidence of major tree-growth (and hence, probably, ecosystem biomass) increases in the northern boreal forests, most clearly over the last century. These possibly anthropogenically related changes in the ecology of tree growth have important implications for modelling future atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Also, where dendroclimatology is concerned to reconstruct longer (increasingly above centennial) temperature histories, such alterations of 'normal' (pre-industrial) tree-growth rates and climate-growth relationships must be accounted for in our attempts to translate the evidence of past tree growth changes.
引用
收藏
页码:65 / 73
页数:9
相关论文
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