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Beier - Poison Cove Bog - CHNO - ITRDB AK157
Originator:
Beier, C.M.; Sink, S.E.Citation Information:
Colin M. Beier, Scott E. Sink, Paul E. Hennon, David V. D’Amore, Glenn P. Juday. 2008. Twentieth-century warming and the dendroclimatology of declining yellow-cedar forests in southeastern Alaska. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 38(6), 1319-1334. doi: 10.1139/X07-240
NOAA Study Page:
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/paleo-search/study/23053Lat:0, Lon:0
Download Data:
Poison Cove Bog | |
---|---|
Correlation Stats | ak157.txt |
Raw Measurements | ak157.rwl |
Raw Measurements - NOAA Template File | ak157-rwl-noaa.txt |
Use Constraints:
Please cite original publication, online resource, dataset and publication DOIs (where available), and date accessed when using downloaded data. If there is no publication information, please cite investigator, title, online resource, and date accessed. The appearance of external links associated with a dataset does not constitute endorsement by the Department of Commerce/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of external Web sites or the information, products or services contained therein. For other than authorized activities, the Department of Commerce/NOAA does not exercise any editorial control over the information you may find at these locations. These links are provided consistent with the stated purpose of this Department of Commerce/NOAA Web site.Distributor:
National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of CommerceResource Description (data set id):
noaa-tree-23053Data Coverage:
Latitude: 57.5306
Longitude: -135.5833
Minimum Elevation: 64 m
Maximum Elevation: 64 m
Earliest Year: 250 cal yr BP (1700 CE)
Most Recent Year: -54 cal yr BP (2004 CE)
Longitude: -135.5833
Minimum Elevation: 64 m
Maximum Elevation: 64 m
Earliest Year: 250 cal yr BP (1700 CE)
Most Recent Year: -54 cal yr BP (2004 CE)
Science Keywords:
Nootka cypress
Alaska yellow-cedar
Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (D. Don) Spach
CHNO
Alaska yellow-cedar
Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (D. Don) Spach
CHNO
Tree Species:
CHNO (Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (D. Don) Spach)
Alaska yellow-cedar
Nootka cypress
Alaska yellow-cedar
Nootka cypress
Parameters:
earth science>paleoclimate>tree-ring>width>ring width
Variables:
what | unit | info |
---|---|---|
age | year Common Era | |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t43a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t40a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t47a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t39a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t42a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t41a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t45a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t44a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t46a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | Tree ID: poi2t38a; units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
total ring width | millimeter | units are 0.01 mm if end-of-series marker is 999 and 0.001 mm if end-of-series marker is -9999 |
Summary/Abstract:
Decline of yellow-cedar (Chamaecyparis nootkatensis ((D. Don) Spach) has occurred on 200 000 ha of temperate rainforests across southeastern Alaska. Because declining forests appeared soon after the Little Ice Age and are limited mostly to low elevations (whereas higher elevation forests remain healthy), recent studies have hypothesized a climatic mechanism involving early dehardening, reduced snowpack, and freezing injury. This hypothesis assumes that a specific suite of microclimatic conditions occurs during late winter and declining cedar populations across the region have responded similarly to these conditions. Based on the first geographically extensive tree ring chronologies constructed for southeastern Alaska, we tested these assumptions by investigating regional climatic trends and the growth responses of declining cedar populations to this climatic variation. Warming winter trends were observed for southeastern Alaska, resulting in potentially injurious conditions for yellow-cedar due to reduced snowfall and frequent occurrence of severe thaw-freeze events. Declining cedar forests shared a common regional chronology for which late-winter weather was the best predictor of annual growth of surviving trees. Overall, our findings verify the influence of elevational gradients of temperature and snow cover on exposure to climatic stressors, support the climatic hypothesis across large spatial and temporal scales, and suggest cedar decline may expand with continued warming.
Study Notes:
NOAA Template Raw Measurements file added 2019-02-08.More Information:
Contact Information:
DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCEI
National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
325 Broadway, E/NE31
Boulder, CO 80305-3328
USA
email: paleo@noaa.gov
phone: 828-271-4800 fax: 303-497-6513