2019
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14672
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ENSO and NAO affect long‐term leaf litter dynamics and stoichiometry of Scots pine and European beech mixedwoods

Abstract: Litterfall dynamics (production, seasonality and nutrient composition) are key factors influencing nutrient cycling. Leaf litter characteristics are modified by species composition, site conditions and water availability. However, significant evidence on how large‐scale, global circulation patterns affect ecophysiological processes at tree and ecosystem level remains scarce due to the difficulty in separating the combined influence of different factors on local climate and tree phenology. To fill this gap, we … Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 153 publications
(357 reference statements)
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“…Growth responses to environmental shifts are difficult to infer from tree responses to single factors [117]. However, observational or experimental multifactor studies in forests are still scarce (refer to [35,95,108,109,118]).…”
Section: Figure 2 (A)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Growth responses to environmental shifts are difficult to infer from tree responses to single factors [117]. However, observational or experimental multifactor studies in forests are still scarce (refer to [35,95,108,109,118]).…”
Section: Figure 2 (A)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Litterfall constitutes a major proportion of nutrient cycling between plant and soils in forest ecosystems [168]. Climatic conditions are closely linked to variations in litterfall annual production [169][170][171][172][173], seasonal patterns [118,171,[174][175][176], and nutrient composition [118,[177][178][179][180]. Hence, projected increasing temperatures and alterations of precipitation regimes will have striking consequences on litterfall dynamics.…”
Section: Nutrient Cyclingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Controlling stand density by thinning could reduce CWD water content under a coniferous canopy as CWD are exposed to radiation and wind. However, under mixed conifer-broadleaf canopy in which a species such as European beech can expand its crown in detriment of Scots pine [56], thinning could actually have the opposite effect. In addition, these effects can change over time, as a moist CWD class 3 could be quickly colonized, generating a CWD class 4 with higher relative surface due to boring and drilling, which in turn could cause faster desiccation in a Mediterranean environment with greatly variable precipitation in late spring-early summer.…”
Section: Interactions Among Variables and Management Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%