2010
DOI: 10.1657/1938-4246-42.4.430
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Differentiating between the Adverse Effects of Nutrient-Limitation and Direct-Cold-Limitation on Tree Growth at High Altitudes

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Cited by 12 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Environmental stress, such as an altitudinal decrease in temperature, can reduce tree growth, although gas exchange studies show no evidence of photosynthetic restriction in treeline trees, and higher NSC accumulation at high altitudes (Tranquillini ; Terashima et al . ; Kabeya ). Li et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Environmental stress, such as an altitudinal decrease in temperature, can reduce tree growth, although gas exchange studies show no evidence of photosynthetic restriction in treeline trees, and higher NSC accumulation at high altitudes (Tranquillini ; Terashima et al . ; Kabeya ). Li et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, an increasing number of studies have investigated the response of treeline seedlings to changing environmental factors such as soil temperature, soil moisture, soil nutrients, light conditions, herbivory, and competition/facilitation (e.g. Maher and Germino, 2006;Anschlag et al, 2008;Batllori et al, 2009;Hofgaard et al, 2009;Kabeya, 2010;Munier et al, 2010); some studies have also explicitly addressed the relative importance of multiple factors (Barbeito et al, 2012;Zurbriggen et al, 2013).…”
Section: Seed-based Regenerationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Seedlings, moreover, respond differently to environmental drivers compared to upright trees in later stages of development because they are less coupled to atmospheric conditions than upright trees (Wilson et al 1987) and often have different sensitivities to environmental factors (Hofgaard et al 2009;Bansal and Germino 2010). Numerous studies have investigated how seedlings of treeline species respond to changes in a variety of environmental factors, such as soil temperature (e.g., Domisch et al 2002;Peng and Dang 2003;Juntunen and Neuvonen 2006), exposure to light (e.g., Johnson and Smith 2005), nitrogen availability (e.g., Sveinbjörnsson et al 1992;Kabeya 2010), drought (e.g., Hättenschwiler and Körner 1995), competition and facilitation (e.g., Moir et al 1999;Germino et al 2002;Batllori et al 2009;Venn et al 2009), and herbivory (e.g., Myster 2009). While interactions between several of these factors have been studied before (e.g., Domisch et al 2002;Myster 2009;Munier et al 2010), there are only few studies on the relative importance of multiple factors (e.g., Kabeya 2010;Barbeito et al 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerous studies have investigated how seedlings of treeline species respond to changes in a variety of environmental factors, such as soil temperature (e.g., Domisch et al 2002;Peng and Dang 2003;Juntunen and Neuvonen 2006), exposure to light (e.g., Johnson and Smith 2005), nitrogen availability (e.g., Sveinbjörnsson et al 1992;Kabeya 2010), drought (e.g., Hättenschwiler and Körner 1995), competition and facilitation (e.g., Moir et al 1999;Germino et al 2002;Batllori et al 2009;Venn et al 2009), and herbivory (e.g., Myster 2009). While interactions between several of these factors have been studied before (e.g., Domisch et al 2002;Myster 2009;Munier et al 2010), there are only few studies on the relative importance of multiple factors (e.g., Kabeya 2010;Barbeito et al 2012). In the present study, we measured proxies for four of these important factors-soil temperature, light conditions, water use efficiency, and nitrogen availability-and evaluated their relative importance for seedling performance of seven tree species at and above the current treeline.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%