Regional expression of the 1988 U.S. Midwest drought in seasonal δ 13 C of tree rings
2007; American Geophysical Union; Volume: 112; Issue: D6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1029/2006jd007081
ISSN2156-2202
Autores Tópico(s)Climate variability and models
ResumoThis study analyzes δ 13 C of subdivisions of the 1988 and 1989 growth rings from three conifer species ( Pinus resinosa , Pinus strobus , and Picea glauca ) across a network of nine sites over four states in the upper U.S. Midwest to infer seasonal and interannual environmental moisture conditions. Both years were characterized by different spatial patterns of drought (expressed through rainfall and Palmer Drought Indices), with the area of 1989 drought being smaller and shifting westward relative to 1988. Rings were subdivided into four equal segments from which holocellulose was separated. The range of δ 13 C variation within each ring was typically 1–2‰ for both years, and the single site where all three species co‐occurred revealed coherent seasonal δ 13 C patterns for the pines but no correlation of the spruce δ 13 C patterns with those of the pines. Various averaged combinations of monthly Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI) and precipitation assigned to each subdivision versus both δ 13 C and discrimination (Δ ≈ δ 13 C air − δ 13 C plant ) yielded significant correlations (generally higher with PDSI) and even stronger correlations when the spruce data were removed. The fraction of average monthly cumulative precipitation (relative to 1900–2001 means) for these 2 years was more strongly related to δ 13 C than either monthly precipitation or monthly fraction of average precipitation, but was not as strongly related to δ 13 C as was PDSI. Furthermore, the pattern of increasing δ 13 C in 1988 observed at several sites is an indicator of the increasing moisture stress of that year, and the difference between the 1988 and 1989 average isotopic compositions of the third and fourth subdivisions matched the regional moisture shift well.
Referência(s)