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Late-spring frost risk between 1959 and 2017 decreased in North America but increased in Europe and Asia

Cited 128 time in Web of Science Cited 135 time in Scopus
Authors

Zohner, Constantin M.; Mo, Lidong; Renner, Susanne S.; Svenning, Jens-Christian; Vitasse, Yann; Benito, Blas M.; Ordonez, Alejandro; Baumgarten, Frederik; Bastin, Jean-François; Sebald, Veronica; Reich, Peter B.; Liang, Jingjing; Nabuurs, Gert-Jan; de-Miguel, Sergio; Alberti, Giorgio; Antón-Fernández, Clara; Balazy, Radomir; Brändli, Urs-Beat; Chen, Han Y H; Chisholm, Chelsea; Cienciala, Emil; Dayanandan, Selvadurai; Fayle, Tom M.; Frizzera, Lorenzo; Gianelle, Damiano; Jagodzinski, Andrzej M.; Jaroszewicz, Bogdan; Jucker, Tommaso; Kepfer-Rojas, Sebastian; Khan, Mohammed Latif; Kim, Hyun Seok; Korjus, Henn; Johannsen, Vivian Kvist; Laarmann, Diana; Lang, Mait; Zawila-Niedzwiecki, Tomasz; Niklaus, Pascal A.; Paquette, Alain; Pretzsch, Hans; Saikia, Purabi; Schall, Peter; Šebeň, Vladimír; Svoboda, Miroslav; Tikhonova, Elena; Viana, Helder; Zhang, Chunyu; Zhao, Xiuhai; Crowther, Thomas W.

Issue Date
2020-06
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Citation
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol.117 No.22, pp.12192-12200
Abstract
Late-spring frosts (LSFs) affect the performance of plants and animals across the world's temperate and boreal zones, but despite their ecological and economic impact on agriculture and forestry, the geographic distribution and evolutionary impact of these frost events are poorly understood. Here, we analyze LSFs between 1959 and 2017 and the resistance strategies of Northern Hemisphere woody species to infer trees' adaptations for minimizing frost damage to their leaves and to forecast forest vulnerability under the ongoing changes in frost frequencies. Trait values on leaf-out and leaf-freezing resistance come from up to 1,500 temperate and boreal woody species cultivated in common gardens. We find that areas in which LSFs are common, such as eastern North America, harbor tree species with cautious (late-leafing) leaf-out strategies. Areas in which LSFs used to be unlikely, such as broad-leaved forests and shrublands in Europe and Asia, instead harbor opportunistic tree species (quickly reacting to warming air temperatures). LSFs in the latter regions are currently increasing, and given species' innate resistance strategies, we estimate that similar to 35% of the European and similar to 26% of the Asian temperate forest area, but only similar to 10% of the North American, will experience increasing late-frost damage in the future. Our findings reveal region-specific changes in the spring-frost risk that can inform decision-making in land management, forestry, agriculture, and insurance policy.
ISSN
0027-8424
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/195890
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1920816117
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